Selasa, 03 Agustus 2010

Tips for the working mom

Many moms would like to have a job to bring extra cash into their household, yet they are troubled about leaving their children. Some children are too young to leave alone and others might just get into trouble!

Wouldn't it be nice to be able to arrange the days and hours that you work around your own schedule to what is convenient for you and your family? Flexibility is the key and is what most mothers are searching for.

Well your search is over! If you are outgoing, you like talking to people and making new friends, then there are several opportunities out there for you. You are able to find a job that offers the extra cash needed, the possibility of having your own career and the flexibility to work around your home life too.

Avon, Tupperware and Pampered Chef are just a few of the many careers that are exactly what you may be looking for.

Becoming a representative for any of these companies gives you the flexibility that is needed to be able to be home for your children and bring in the extra needed cash. Each company will train you, so you can prosper from having your own business. Only you control the amount of hours and days that you wish to work and make as much money as you care to. You can work as little or as much as you want. It is all up to you! You can make just some extra cash or you can build yourself a career with the many other opportunities that these companies have.

These are the benefits of finding a career that allows you to be home.

1. You are home with your children.

This is the most important reason for staying at home!

2. Your hours are flexible.

You create your schedule so if something comes up last minute, you can arrange to be home or wherever needed.

3. You can work as much as you want.

One month you could work alot, the next month you could work only a few days. It's all up to you!

4. You can make extra money.

Everyone can always use some spare change!

5. You can make new friends.

It's always nice to get out on your own without the kids every now and then.

6. You can have something to call your own.

You are not just a homemaker, but a career mom!

Here is information on a few companies!

Avon (search for 'avon' at your favorite search engine)

-Become a representative for a company that sells cosmetics and more. You don't sell products door to door, you mail out or pass out brochures and people contact you with orders!

Tupperware (search for 'tupperware' on the Web)

-Become a consultant for a company that sells kitchenware and other gadgets. You can have demonstrations in people's homes or just hand out catalogs for book parties. Everyone loves Tupperware!

Pampered Chef (Search for 'pamperedchef' online)

-Become a demonstrator for a company that sells kitchen gadgets to make cooking easier and fun! You can have home parties or pass out the catalogs for orders.

These careers are easy to start and very rewarding. Have fun!


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Stress management for women

Business trips, field trips and trips to the grocery store. Dry cleaners, clean laundry, cleaning house, house warmings and open house. Phone bills, billable hours, hours and hours of homework, and work to do at home. Today’s women have enough stress to put them over the edge. They are spread thin with responsibilities and stretched to the limit with the demands of family, career and home. They have been conditioned by traditional upbringing to conquer their household chores: cleanliness is next to godliness. Their hearts tell them to be a good wife, a good mother and a good daughter, and at the same time, their minds require that they be intellectually stimulated by a challenging career. In many cases, economics require that the woman hold a full-time job outside the home.

If you are one of these women and you feel as though you are about to self-destruct, you are not alone. Many women feel that they are doing a lot, but not doing any one thing well. Day by day, they are confronted with challenges that seem to pile up. There is an overwhelming sense of feeling incomplete, of not finishing what is started, and of being unsure of or feeling insecure about her accomplishments. They know that they take on too much, but they do not know how to make life’s hectic merry-go-round slow down enough to get off.

The following stress management tips for women are five steps toward taking control of your life. Begin with these, and once you complete them, the rest should fall into place.

1. Learn to say “No”.

There are only twenty four hours in a day. Eight hours are set aside for sleep, approximately two hours for eating, and if you work full time, add eight more hours for work and about one-and-a-half-hours for commuting. That does not leave much time for family and home.

If for you, the answer to the question, “are you on overload?” is “yes”, then learn to say “no”. Cut out unnecessary activities, limit your telephone calls, trim your social calendar, and do not feel compelled to chair every organization’s committee or event. Activities can certainly go on without you. Learn to share or delegate responsibilities when you cannot avoid them, by having confidence in the abilities of others.

Prioritize your time and put you and your family first. There will always be other opportunities for philanthropic work and for saving the world, but children only grow up once. Be choosy. If it is your child’s school that calls you to service, consider involvement there, on a reasonable level. Children love to see their parents take an active role in their education.

2. Make family time.

After learning to say “no” and clearing your calendar, set aside time that is for family only. Designate special family nights or even entire weekends when you can spend quality time together. Pop popcorn and have a movie-viewing marathon on a rainy day, or go out for pizza. Bake cookies and decorate them. Spend the day at the beach or sightseeing in the city. Plant a vegetable garden or build a snowman. Read a long book aloud together, one chapter per week. Host a board game tournament or go on an all day outing. Go camping or visit a museum. Take a long drive or a short vacation. Whatever the activity, be sure that it is limited to your immediate family, and that there is an opportunity for conversation, laughing and fun.

At home, turn off the telephones, the television, the pager and the computer, and make it an old-fashioned, low-tech family day. Family meetings provide a golden opportunity for exchanging ideas, expressing feelings and keeping in touch. In addition, you will reap the added benefit of communicating with your children, and they will appreciate the attention.

3. Set aside time for your spouse (or significant other).

Now that you have blocked out time for your family, be sure not to forget your spouse. While it is important to spend time with your children, it is also important to maintain your relationship as a couple. And, as long as you do devote enough quality time to your children, there should be no guilt in spending a little bit of time without them.

First, hire a babysitter. Be sure it is someone you trust, and that it is someone who is mature, responsible and capable. If you feel that your children are in good hands, you are more apt to relax and enjoy your time away from them.

Make a date with your spouse – a romantic night out on the town, complete with dining and dancing, or go out to dinner and a movie. Laughing is a big stress buster. Plan activities that are fun and that have giggling potential. Try candlelight bowling, miniature golfing, roller or ice skating, or a visit to an amusement park. If too much structure means added stress for you, then a spontaneous picnic in the park or a long drive are better options. The key here is just to spend some time alone with your spouse, and have an opportunity to talk, to laugh and to enjoy each other.

4. Indulge in “your” time.

When both your children and spouse are covered, it is finally time to think of you. Though connecting with your family is important, it is critical that you care for yourself, physically and emotionally. Make time for a relaxing manicure, pedicure, or therapeutic massage. Steamy, hot bubble baths are especially soothing. Add soft music and the glow and aroma of scented candles, and you are sure to release some of the day’s stress. Long walks are particularly thought provoking and calming, or join an exercise class for some strenuous stress relief. Sip flavored coffee or chamomile tea by a fireplace, learn to meditate, or treat yourself to reading a thick romance novel.

Appeal to your intellect, expand your knowledge and enrich your life by joining a book club. The same holds true for enrolling in a course. Just be sure to choose a subject that you enjoy, and does not take too much time away from your family (that would be two steps backward).

Participate in an occasional girls’ night out. Though you have already trimmed your social calendar, it is important to maintain some contact with your female friends. Women need other women for emotional support, and there is nothing like a best friend who understands you and confides in you.

5. Get rid of negative forces of energy.

After saying “no” and making time for yourself and your family, try to stay positive. Make this possible by getting rid of forces of energy that drain you. For instance, people who are continually negative or who turn to gossip can bring you down. This is a blow to self-esteem and is a time waster (and you already know how valuable time is). If suggestions to be more positive do not work, the best path is to gently distance yourself from these sources.

If the draining force of energy is not a person, it could be the feeling of being disorganized. When it is physical clutter that creates stress, the solution is sometimes as simple as hiring someone to clean or organize your home. In addition, it frees up time for you to spend with your family.

Finally, if the negative force is something inside of you, confront it and rid yourself of it. Commit to a diet and exercise program to shed unwanted pounds, work to overcome fears or attempt to mend a family feud. Once you remove these negative forces, you can gather up enough positive energy to move ahead.

Congratulations! By following the aforementioned tips, you should have eliminated a great deal of stress. It is now up to you to realize that it is unreasonable to expect perfection. Just sit back, relax, do your best, and take control of your life.


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Working moms & parenting

There are many conflicts involved with being a working mom. If it isn’t already hard enough juggling the many duties of mom, housewife, cook, maid, taxi-cab driver, tutor, wife, and doctor, the working mom also has pressures of having a career. How does one find time to be all these things and still work a 40 hours work week? How does one juggle these two roles?

Often the conflicts of being a working woman and a mom can not only cause stress, but disharmony in the family. So how does a woman deal with these conflicting interests?

When mom is at work, the stresses of being a mother need to stay at home. However, this is much more difficult said than done. But here are some surefire ways to help:

1. Have the kids set out their clothes the night before. This will end some of the morning stresses of, "mom I can’t find anything to wear, mom where’s my socks, mom…"

2. Have the kids make their lunches right before bed. This will end the cries of, "mom, we don’t have anything to make for lunch."

3. When the kids finish their homework, have them put it away and next to the front door. This will stop the last minute searches for homework.

4. The night before, think about what you would like for dinner. In the morning, get up a half hour early and put all the ingredients into a slow cooker, turn it on low and let it cook while you are at work. This will end the worries of what to cook when you get home from work.

5. Once the chaos of the morning is over, and you are on your way to work. Put on some relaxing music. Allow the stress of getting the kids off to school leave you before you enter your place of work.

6. Consider getting a beeper or cell phone for school emergencies and have the teachers call that number should anything happen to the kids. This will end the anxiety and stress of having personal phone calls made on company phones as well as help you to relax when answering the phones (knowing that it won’t be your kids).

When mom is at home, the stresses of the job need to stay at work. Again, this is harder said than done. But perhaps these ideas will help:

1. Before leaving work, make a to do list for the next days tasks.

2. If a project will only take an extra five minutes to finish, do it before you leave. This way, you won’t beat yourself up over not having finished it.

3. Don’t start any new tasks, that you cannot finish thirty minutes before you leave work.

4. Play some de-stressing music on the way home. Or listen to your favorite sports station or tape.

5. If you have to take work home, don’t do it when you first walk in the door. Spend some time with the kids and husband first. Tell yourself that you can finish your work when the kids are in bed or off doing their own thing.

6. Make it a habit of having family meals together. Turn off the t.v. and the radio and just enjoy the company of each other. It won’t be easy at first, but it’ll all pay off in the end.

7. Most importantly, remind yourself that the job is only a means to helping your family, not destroying it.


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Children of working mothers

"These aren't somebody else's children, and this isn't somebody else's problem," Donna Shalala said in 1996, while addressing the 100th annual PTA convention.

Being a woman in the 90's is difficult; most women feel pulled in more than one direction. Some women want it all, and they attempt to have it all. Other mom's put their careers on hold until their children are older, which sometimes attracts the disdain of family members, friends, and peers.

This decision is one of the most important a woman ever faces. Some women have no choice; they are single mothers who must work. Other women do have a choice. These women are married with stable incomes, which allows them to exercise their freedom of choice. Who meets her child's needs for nurturing, attention, and education the best; is it the stay at home mom or the working mom?

Nurturing and caring for young children is essential. Moms must bond with their children at an early age. A mom who stays home with her children is able to share more than just time. She strengthens the connection between herself and her child. A mother who works must rely on other people to interact with her child. You are paying a person to love your child. That sounds a bit strange, but it is true.

Care and love are synonyms for what mothers have given their children since the beginning of time. Child-care has become a major issue in this country, which tells me that our children are in need of love. The optimum situation is a family member whom can provide day-care, but this is not always an option. In many cases, complete strangers are raising America's children.

America's children are crying out for attention, while drugs, alcohol, and teenage pregnancy plague our society. Aren't our children worth more than our careers? Mothers who stay at home fill an important need for their children. Simply, they are there when their children need them, not at work.

If children get attention when they are young, they are able to cope better as teenagers. Children who have a close bond with their parents are more apt to talk to parents about sex, drugs, and alcohol. The fundamental years - between birth and five years of age- have been lost to most American children.

The attention a child receives during these years is irreplaceable. The amount of attention a child receives influences his or her direction in life.

Our children's education is our responsibility as parents, not the people we pay to educate them. While working parents can afford better schools, their children may benefit more from being taught right from wrong. So many children from "good" backgrounds with two parents in the home have taken guns and shot classmates. These families normally have two parents working outside the home.

Teaching our children moral values is more important than sending them to an expensive private school. Mothers that stay home can, many times, do a better job of instilling values in their children.

There are studies that show that children in day-care interact better with their peers. Why on earth wouldn't they get along better with children their own age? They are in day-care and pre-schools all day long!

Studies also support that children of two working parents get higher grades in school, which makes sense. Children of career parents not only go to better schools, but they also are under more pressure to succeed. They are the children of professional people with high profile careers, which explains the higher grades.

These are our children; they are America's future. In Donna Shalala's words, "Make no mistake about it, if we don't act fast, we could lose an entire generation."

A major report released by the Carnegie Corporation of New York in 1996 found that at least one-half of our teenagers are at risk for dangerous behaviors that could seriously diminish their lives.

Many of us have been both a working mom and a stay at home mom, which has given us the unique opportunity to see both sides of this issue. We may be happier when I work, but perhaps our children are not. Whose happiness should take priority? For many moms, children are more important than a career.

We have the rest of our lives to make ourselves happy. The window of time for America's children, our children, is growing short. Mom, tighten your belt a little financially, and your apron strings.




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