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5 Tips Parents Need to Know
By
Lauren Paige Kennedy
Reviewed by
Michael W. Smith, MD
For the woman who once famously said, "I think children are like pancakes:
You sort of ruin the first one, and you get better at it the second time
around," Kelly Ripa's kid-smarts come through first-hand experience, now that
her third child, Joaquin, is 4. (Michael is 10 and Lola is 7.) That's a whole
lot of trial and error under her Prada belt -- but it's also hard-won wisdom on
what works and what doesn't in raising strong, healthy kids today.
Unlike her predecessor, Kathy Lee Gifford (who never met a moment she
couldn't turn into the Cody and Cassidy show), Ripa has managed to escape the
cloying trap and win over devotees with her self-deprecating good humor
regarding child-rearing. And being able to laugh at your kids -- and yourself
-- is an essential part of good parenting, leading child health experts
say.
Ripa's wry riffs on motherhood began immediately after giving birth to her
first son in 1998. The 37-year-old co-host of Live With Regis and Kelly
jokes that she and husband, actor Mark Consuelos, wished they'd been given
instructions to take home from the hospital.
"Around the time [Michael] was born we'd just bought one of those widescreen
TVs, which were all the rage then. And we walked out of the store with, like, a
6,000-page manual on how to work the thing. The hospital, on the other hand,
gave us a leaflet that said things like, 'When the baby is hungry, feed him.
When he's tired, put him to bed. Incredible, right?"
But now that Ripa is a seasoned pro at being a mom, she feels confident
enough to share the following tips with those brave souls venturing for the
first time into the strange terrain of sleepless nights, the terrible twos, and
learning how to say "no."
1. "Don't be your kids' BFF."
An essential lesson in the laws of parenthood? "'No' means 'no,'" Ripa says.
"Be a parent and not a friend. Basically, it's my philosophy that doing the
easy thing in the short term makes it harder for parents in the long run.
Giving in when you want to say 'no' may quiet things down momentarily, but
you'll just have more of the same -- and then some -- down the road."
2. "Pace yourself on the guilt."
None of us is perfect -- and that includes parents. "I'm a flawed parent,
but I work hard," Ripa says. "I feel for all parents, because we're all
learning as we go." In other words, put in the time with your kids; offer them
your very best guidance, but understand that you will make mistakes. And
if you acknowledge and learn from your missteps, your kids will, too.
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