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Motherhood: "The hardest job you will ever love!"
Philosophy: Through shared experiences, we believe women can learn and support each other while having fun!
Vision: While respecting the difference of each others' families, we can grow together.
Meetings: The club meets once a month. We will also have date nights, cooking classes, book clubs, charity work, play dates, and walking groups.
Suggested Meeting Topics: Nutrition, Vaccines, Child Development, Making Your Own Baby Food, Fashion, Skin Care, Interior Design, Personal Finance, Infant Massage, Love & Logic, Prenatal Care & Fitness, Marriage & Relationships, First Aid & Safety, Children's Literacy, Entertaining, Holiday & Children's Crafts, Gift Ideas, etc.
What To Think About For Each Meeting: Some of the meeting will take place in another location and will not be a standard meeting. For example, our September meeting will be our first "Date Night." For a standard meeting, please consider the following:
(Keep in mind, these are simply suggestions and we are not asking that you bring one from each category. Contribute as much as you wish! )
1. Gift Swap-Do you have a gift at home that someone else might find more useful? Bring it for our gift swap!
2. Pay It Forward-Have you read a really great article recently or any form of information that you would like to share with the group? If so, bring 20 copies to share at our next meeting!
3. Hot Tips-Have you heard of any fun fund raisers, cooking classes or any "Hot Tip" you want to post on our bulletin board to share with the group? If so, bring your tip with you to our meeting!
4. Idea Swap: Depending on the topic, it would be great if each guest brought an idea to share for our group conversation. Get your ideas down on paper and bring it along with you to the meeting to present to the group. If possible, make 20 copies to share or just bring your original and we can distribute copies for you at our next meeting.
Organizers: Amy & Danielle
About the Organizers: Danielle is a stay at home mom with three sons and a daughter. Amy is a part-time teacher with two sons. Both woman have bachelors and masters degrees in education.
Blog Discalmer: Information presented on this blog is believed to be accurate and reliable, however, NMF assumes no responsibility for any errors appearing in the information. Further, NMF assumes no responsibility for the use of the information provided. In some cases, the information may need to be updated. DO NOT RELY ON THE TEXT CONTAINED ON THIS WEBSITE IF THE PRECISE LANGUAGE IS IMPORTANT FOR YOUR PURPOSES.
Also, we welcome and appreciate various perspectives. Comments and postings are not necessarily the beliefs of all NMF members, if any. We believe we can learn and grow from being open to all.
3 comments:
My biggest challenge was getting mastistis after 6 weeks, an infection of the mammary gland. You have flu-like symptoms (high fever, chills, sore bones, etc.) PLUS it feels like someone whacked you with a baseball bat in the boob. The only "cure" besides medication is to nurse through it, which feels like actual shards of glass are coursing through your nipples. It was hell. If you suspect mastistis, get an antibiotic immediately and get someone to help you take care of baby around the clock, because you will be unable to do anything but lay there.
The best part about nursing is never having to worry about if your baby will be hungry--as long as she's with you, you have food! It was one less thing to pack in the diaper bag or for overnights!
Worst parts: 1) that first week with the first baby, when you hear "if you're doing it right it won't hurt". Even if you ARE doing it "right" it can still be a painful and you just have to stick it out! 2) the leaking - so annoying 3) pumping at a workplace with no privacy so you resort to sitting in your car, in a parking lot, in the middle of winter.
Best parts: 1) the bonding, 2) the convenience 3) the downtime you are forced to take throughout the day (especially when you have company you can use a break from!), 4) building up your freezer stash of "liquid gold" to earn you some freedom 5) never having to wean your baby from a bottle (the pacifier is another story...ugh)
Challenge: The first 4-5 weeks. Sore nipples, feeling trapped in your house, being the only one to feed your baby.
Best part: The good parts far outweigh the challenges. Once I got through the first few weeks, it was great! Convienent, FREE, most nutritious, and extremely rewarding. The bonding is the very best reward of them all!
I like what Christina said about the freezer stash! It is your key to some freedom!! HA! :)
Danielle
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