2010
01.28

Billy Joel’s Lullaby (Goodnight, My Angel) was one of Maya’s favorites even when she was just a few weeks old. When she was hardly three months old, she hummed the entire song, accompanying me as I sang to her (the video is about three minutes long).

Get the Flash Player to see this content.

As she started to speak, she has developed a rather mellifluous, sing song voice that sounds delightful (at least to her family and friends). And of late, she’s resumed her accompaniment to songs. One jetlagged night in India, Maya was listening to Genesis’ “Hold On My Heart” playing on my laptop while I was occupied in another room. At 4 am in the morning, I heard her suddenly go “Ahhh be they” in synchronicity to Phil Collins’ singing “I will be there”. Since that night, she’s started humming to other songs, her favorite being “Soul Meets Body” by that strangely named group, Death Cab For Cutie. She loves to lip synch the “Para Para Pa Pa” piece of the song as well as the repetition of the chorus of the title, “Where soul meets body”.

Among the many children’s books that one of our close friends gave us (books their kids had grown past) was a nursery rhyme book. Maya loved hearing us recite the rhymes, demanding us to do so endlessly. Last October, she christened the book, “Baa, Baa, Bashee” in honor of the first poem “Baa, Baa, Black Sheep”.

In the last couple of weeks, she has started to recite most of the rhymes in the book in her own funny way. As we recite each rhyme, she recites the rhyme with us, speaking the first and last word of each line clearly and filling in the space between them with sounds that she passes off as words. Very particular about the order in which the rhymes are recited – they must be recited in the order they’re in the book – she protests if we mixup the order and frowns if we refer to the book to correct the order. Here is a video that I took about two weeks ago of her reciting a few of the rhymes with her mother.

Get the Flash Player to see this content.

Powered by ScribeFire.

2010
01.24

What makes for a happy marriage ? What makes two people stick together, day after day, month after month, year after mundane year ? Is it love ? Is it compatibility ? Is it fear of being alone ? Is it social pressure ? Is it ennui, the deadening of desire and energy that seems to come with age ? Is it habit ? Is it the pain of modern divorces, with their petty separations – this pickle bottle is mine, my mother pickled it and you never cared for it, this painting is mine, this coffee table book on Maine is mine ? Is it the fear of knowing that the relationship has been no more than the sum of their collected possessions and a shared bed ? Is it children ? Is it a biological need ? Is it the willful looking past hurts rendered, consciously and unconsciously ? Is it money ?

And what are the ingredients of a happy marriage ? Tolstoy wrote that all happy families are alike. So what is common across all happy marriages ? Is it fealty, physical and emotional ? I’m so faithful to you, I haven’t sleep with anyone else, even if we haven’t slept together in eons; I don’t discuss my fears and confusion with anyone else, I don’t even acknowledge them to myself anymore ? Is it the ability to work through conflicts, to sleep with compromises and to not think of them as compromises ? Is it the lack of conflicts ? Is it respect ? Are successful marriages egalitarian ?

Few books I’ve read explore the narrative of a marriage, searching for answers to these questions. Most are about either the romance or the breakup, or about infidelity. Only a few are about the sustenance past puppy romance, about the transition from pop songs about love to jazz songs about relationships, of the transformation of coca cola to fine wine. The first book about a married life that stayed with me was Joan Didion’s “The Year of Magical Thinking”. The book was about the grief of losing her husband of forty years, but in chronicling the silence, she chronicled what lived before. She wrote: “Marriage is not only time: it is also, paradoxically, the denial of time. For forty years I saw myself through John’s eyes. I did not age.”

Two books, one finished a month back and the other still in progress, are two recent reads that explore the inner life of a marriage.

A Happy Marriage by Rafael Yglesias. The title leapt out at me as I passed a neighborhood book store. The reviews it garnered made me pick up a copy from the local library. The first chapter barely interested me. The second walloped me. Never before have I read a book that laid out with such unflinching detail what it is like to be by the side of your spouse dying of cancer. The passages stunned me with their rawness and honesty. How do the people around you react when they know that you’ll die in two weeks ? What do you do ? When do you choose to say goodbye ? Who do you choose to say it to ? When is it too early and when may it be too late ? He writes the details he has to manage, people (the in-laws, the parents, the children, the friends), the choices of medical treatment, who gets to see her and for how long, what does she have the strength for and for how long. Just as Joan Didion’s book first showed me a glimpse of the foreign country that is grief, this book offered me a clearer glimpse of the landscape of the end of days of a spouse. Like Didion’s book, this book is semi-autobiographical, a mostly truthful rendering of the death of his wife, Margaret (only some of the dialogues have been made up, to make up for gaps in memory).

Juxtaposed with these chapters of end of days are chapters of courtship, marriage, parenting, the temptations of love outside marriage and the reasons for sticking on. While the chapters on courtship come off seeming weaker than the ones that describe her end, their courtship is rendered with honesty in unusual scenes, vulnerable scenes, vulnerability brought on by patterns laid out by the author’s culture, complicated by his early success (the author was a successful, published author at 16, a position I envied. He narrates the consequences of such an early success with such candor, I reconsidered my envy). Some of the author’s awkwardness reminded me of my own when I courted Shanthala. I read with a sense of deja vu scenes such as the awkward birthday gifts that he usually got her in the early days.

Yglesias writes: “He longed to penetrate the mystery of how they had managed to live a life together while they were so different in their natures and in their expectations of one another. And if there was no answer to be found in a last talk with his wife, at least he wanted to tell her what she had meant to him, and to hear what he had meant to her, because soon there would be only the loneliness of monologue.” Yglesias’s unstated question is whether their’s was a happy marriage. As I read the book, I wondered about some preconceived notions I had about a happy marriage such as: Is a happy marriage empty of strife, of infidelity ? Do opposites attract only during courtship or can it also cement a marriage ?

The other book, the one that I’m still reading, is Wallace Stegner’s Pulitzer Prize winning “Angle of Repose”. The narrator is an old, wheelchair bound historian, Lyman Ward. Trapped within the confines of a frail, paraplegic body, living alone – stubbornly, despite the misgivings of his son – he tries to piece together the life of his grandmother. Like Mark Knopfler, in narrating the story of a single life, he narrates a larger story, of a country, of a generation. Interposing passages of his grandmother’s life are Lyman Ward’s musings and aspects of his life. His introspective thoughts are filled with a grace and luminescence that make me want to go back and read them again and again.

The book drew me in with its meditative power, observations of nature, musings about the applications of the laws of physics to life, of life at the wild frontier that was the American West. For example, the very first page has this passage about the intersection of time and personality: “Before I can say I am, I was. Heraclitus and I, prophets of flux, know that the flux is composed of parts that imitate and repeat each other. Am or was, I am cumulative, too. I am everything I ever was, whatever you and Leah may think. I am much of what my parents and especially my grandparents were – inherited stature, coloring, brains, bones (that part unfortunate), plus transmitted prejudices, cultures, scruples, likings, moralities, and moral errors I defend as if they were personal and not familial.”. In another passage, Lyman Ward muses about the Doppler Effect of the life of his grandmother: “The sound of anything coming at you – a train, say, or the future – has a higher pitch than the sound of the same thing going away. … I would like to hear your life as you heard it, coming at you, instead of hearing it as I do, a sober sound of expectations reduced, desires blunted, hopes deferred or abandoned, chances lost, defeats accepted, griefs borne”. In a third, he writes about a morning in Grass Valley, California: “May 28, I see by the calendar. The brief and furious spring of these foothills is over, summer is here before I saw it coming. The wildflowers along the fence are dried up, the wild oats are gold, not green, the pine openings no longer show the bloody purple of Judas trees, the orchard and the wisteria are in fruit and pod, not blossom. From now until the November rains, the days will be so unchanging that without the Saturday ballgame I won’t be able to tell week from weekend. Who wants to ? When I was a boy here, summer was narcosis. I am counting on it to be what it always was.”. I wish I could write a tenth as sublimely as Stegner does.

In trying to piece together his grandmother’s life, Lyman Ward realizes what he’s doing is trying to understand the marriage of his grandparents. Lyman Ward explains to his skeptical son: “What interests me in all these papers is not Susan Burling Ward the novelist and illustrator, and not Oliver Ward the engineer, and not the West they spend their lives in. What really interests me is how two such unlike particles clung together, and under what strains, rolling downhill into their future until they reached the angle of repose where I knew them. That’s where the interest is. That is where the meaning will be if I find any”.

Two thirds of the book are a record of that relationship. Of a relationship forged by distance, by the hard frontier life. And in describing that relationship, he also describes the conquest of the West, of life in one horse mining towns, of lynchings by vigilantes, the conflict of interest between government surveyors and the miners wishing access to that information before it became public, and the people who lived in these times. But the kernel rests on the unlikely relationship. The remaining third of the book cover aspects of Lyman Ward’s life, how this quest affects his life and his graceful musings.

Like Yglesias’ book, Stegner’s book is part fiction and part true story. The characterization of the grandmother and grandfather are also drawn from Stegner’s mother and father. Stegner also modeled the grandmother on Mary Hallock Foote, whose letters provided a basis for the novel (and stirred up some cries of plagiarism). The novel is peppered with cameos by real life Western explorers and engineers such as Clarence King, Henry Janin and Samuel Emmons.

The story of people striking West in search of opportunity, fame and fortune is not unlike an immigrant story. Of the many Indians I have seen in this country, the price of the journey has always been paid more dearly by the women, just as women and children have always paid the price of men’s ambitions through history. A passage that addresses the plight of such women is an example of the universality of Stegner’s writing: “When frontier historians theorize about the uprooted, the lawless, the purseless, and the socially cut-off who settled the West, they are not talking about people like my grandmother. So much that was cherished and loved, women like her had to give up; and the more they gave it up, the more they carried it helplessly with them”.

Shanthala grew up in a single place since she can remember, mostly in the same house. I grew up everywhere, uprooted every 3-4 years. Shanthala, like Scarlett of Gone with the Wind, is rejuvenated by a visit home, her parents’ home. I envy her. I wish sometimes a place could rejuvenate me so, a place I could call home the way she does. Stegner addresses this feeling from a different perspective, but in a way that touches the essence of my envy when he writes: “I wonder if ever again Americans can have the experience of returning to a home place so intimately known, profoundly felt, deeply loved, and absolutely submitted to ? It is not quite true that you can’t go home again. I have done it, coming back here. But it gets less likely. We have had too many divorces, we have consumed too much transportation, we have lived too shallowly in too many places”. Reading this, I realized that I was an immigrant before I came to the US, have been an immigrant all my life, living too shallowly in too many places, uprooted just as I was beginning to set roots.

Great literature can speak to people of completely disparate backgrounds, to the common humanity that binds us all. Stegner’s book is great literature.

I highly recommend both books.

You can read excerpts of both “A Happy Marriage” and “Angle of Repose” online. I also recommend Terry Gross’ interview of Rafael Yglesias (transcript available too).

2010
01.16

“Two broken tigers on fire in the night
Flicker their souls to the wind”

Two of the most beautiful lines that I’ve heard in all of my musical journeys. Can you believe a song, a rock song at that, that grabs you like a thriller from the first lines and doesn’t let go till the end, almost eight minutes later. And the song has a beautiful, sad ending like a great epic. And the song is the chronicle of the Third Reich’s disastrous invasion of Russia, the beginning of its end, told from the perspective of a Russian foot soldier.

Or how about this song, “The Running Man”, that chronicles the life of a hunted man (a Nazi ?), running from the hunted, that starts with:

Before the phone hits the receiver
You’re halfway to the door
The voice said ‘get out while you can,
There’s just ten minutes, nothing more’

Or a song about the French Revolution called “Palace of Versailles” that starts with:

The wands of smoke are rising
From the walls of the Bastille
And through the streets of Paris
Runs a sense of the unreal
The kings have all departed
There servants are nowhere
We burned out all their mansions
In the name of Robespierre

Probably no other rock artist has set history to such beautiful music and woven such compelling historical tales as Al Stewart.

I was introduced to his music in Paris. When I went to meet a friend in one of the company apartments, I heard this beautiful music coming from one of the rooms. I asked what the music was and who lived in that room. I was told that the guy who lived there was a snob who had the most expensive and gorgeous sounding music system in all the company. Snob or not, I wanted to know what the music was. I knocked on the door and entered his den. A guy sat on the floor, sprouting a moustache and an attitude. I introduced myself and asked him what was playing. He said, “Al Stewart”, disdainfully. The song that I heard was “Roads to Moscow”, the song whose lines I quoted at the start of this post. The album was “The Best of Al Stewart“.

I remained in the room listening to the rest of the music and a few months later, the snob and I were good friends. We’d spend hours listening to music. I was coming to Paris from my years spent in small towns of Southern India where western music was hard to come by. And what did come by was the mainstream stuff, stuff that I had grown tired of, stuff that was unmemorable a week or a month later. I was in search of something less ephemeral, more soul grabbing. Deepak introduced me to a lot of new music, music that went under the genre of progressive rock, of groups such as Yes, ELP, Rush and King Crimson. Of all of them, the only two that remained are Al Stewart and Camel.

Al Stewart has a pleasing and distinctive voice to accompany his distinctive musical stories. Hear it once and you can recognize it again quite easily, just like Mark Knopfler’s guitaring. His musical journey began with a guitar and this voice, singing folk rock songs of intimate portraits gleaned from his life. Stories of girl friends – won, lost and love still searching – of friends and their lives, of street life and characters like history teachers. Here are some lines from one of his early songs, In Brooklyn:

‘Oh I come from Pittsburgh to study astrology,’
She said as she stepped on my instep,
‘I could show you New York with a walk between Fourth Street and Nine.’
Then out of her coat taking seven harmonicas
She sat down to play on a doorstep sayin
‘Come back to my place I will show you the stars and the signs’
So I followed her into the black lands
Where the window frames peel and flake
And the old Jewish face behind the lace
Even now trying to get to see what’s cooking
Just John the Baptist in the park getting laid thinking there’s no-one looking
And its eighty degrees and I’m down on my knees in Brooklyn

Interestingly, his first single, in 1967, included guitaring by the legendary Led Zeppelin guitarist, Jimmy Page. His albums also featured good instrumentals such as “A Small Fruit Song” from his third album, Zero She Flies. At one of his concerts, he joked that jazz is what happens when a musician continues to play even after they don’t know what they’re playing, this despite his third album containing an 18 minute track that chronicled his love life. The song reads like a rock version of Raj Kapoor’s “Jaane Kahan Gaye Woh Din”. Wikipedia credits the song as being the first mainstream record release to include the “f” word. I like how the song ends:

Of all the girls I ever knew
some loved and some denied me
And all the words I ever said
have been no use to hide me
And all the songs I ever sung
each one of them untied me
And all the girls I ever loved
have left themselves inside me

Wikipedia has this to say about this stage of his career: “Stewart was a key figure in a fertile era in British music and he appears throughout the musical folklore of the age. He played at the first ever Glastonbury Festival in 1970, knew Yoko Ono pre-Lennon, shared a London apartment with a young Paul Simon, and hosted at the legendary Les Cousins folk club in London in the 1960s.”

Things began to change with his fifth album, “Past, Present and Future“, released in 1973. Six of the eight songs from that album had historical roots from melodies about the second World War to a portrait of the American president, Warren Harding, to one about the prophecies of Nostradamus. This was the first album to be properly released in the US, though it didn’t receive much airplay on commercial radio stations due to the length of its best songs.

Two albums later came the meteoric “Year Of The Cat”. Al Stewart is mostly known to everybody for this album. He says that this was attempt to construct a chart-busting album. “If this didn’t work, I don’t know how to create one”, he said. It had fewer historical songs than say “Past, Present and Future”, but the three that it did were gems: Lord Grenville, On The Border and Flying Sorcery. The title track is among my all time favorites, along with Roads to Moscow. His description of the woman in the title track is brilliant and unique:

She comes out of the sun in a silk dress running
Like a water colour in the rain

as is the the starting of the song:

On a morning from a Bogart movie
In a country where they turn back time
You go strolling through the crowd like Peter Lorre
Contemplating a crime

It is a song that speaks to the senses with lines of incense and patchouli, blue tiled walls, drum beats and rhythms.

The rest of his albums never quite achieved the popularity of Year of the Cat though they possessed gems such as Merlin’s Time, Running Man, Song On The Radio and Palace of Versailles. He mostly disappeared from the mainstream radio scene. But that hasn’t stopped him from continuing to put out albums. His last album “Sparks of Ancient Light” was released in 2008. The highlight of the album was the song “Shah of Shahs” about the last days of Reza Shah Pahlavi of Iran. He sings:

After these processions comes the sweeping up
The rag and bone possessions, an old tin cup
The army trucks have hauled away the newly slain
The angry crowd retreats, but they’ll be back again

And the prisoner in the palace does not understand
The ingratitude around him after all he’s done and planned
But if this the way that it must be then he’ll be damned
If he will let them take away his perfect dream

….

He cried inside the limousine and at the airport too
Where the soldier knelt before him and kissed his shoe
He flew across the desert and the open sea
While they tore down all his statues and his legacy

And the victor greets the newsmen with a strange and stoic style
They take a hundred thousand pictures and in none of them a smile
But this is just the way that it must be now for a while
he’s only come to bring another perfect dream

Luckily for me, he still tours, performing at small, off beat but popular stages. He is back to being a folk artist again, singing his popular and not-so-popular tunes with a just a guitar. He’d sometimes be accompanied by his then collaborator, guitarist Laurence Juber. Almost twenty years after I first heard his song, I saw him perform live. He came to the Bay Area twice within a year and we saw him both times, driving nearly two hours each way the second time. His concert was charming despite the lack of orchestration because he also spoke well, with understated, wry British humor.

In the music shops of Paris at that time I lived there, only a handful of his albums were available, all very expensive. So Deepak and I purchased an album each, Year of The Cat, and its followup, Time Passages. I had to wait till I came to the US to buy some of his other albums. After collecting seven of his albums, I thought I had enough. For a while, he vanished from my music scene as jazz and Mark Knopfler supplanted just about everything else.

Then Maya was born. A child can begin a journey of rediscovery. One afternoon, looking for some music with an afternoon mood, I played Lord Grenville and Year of the Cat to Maya. She was hooked to both songs and for over two months now, they continue to be the songs she takes to her afternoon nap. I’ve introduced other songs such as Time Passages, Almost Lucy and Palace of Versailles, all of which she likes. Roads to Moscow is one of her favorite bedtime tracks. Last night, she evan began humming the chorus of the track. As I listened to Roads to Moscow, to her humming and watched the joy in her face as she listened to the song, my thoughts harked back to my history with Al Stewart and I drifted into those Time Passages.

It was late in December, the sky turned to snow
All round the day was going down slow
Night like a river beginning to flow
I felt the beat of my mind go
Drifting into time passages
Years go falling in the fading light
Time passages
Buy me a ticket on the last train home tonight

Well I’m not the kind to live in the past
The years run too short and the days too fast
The things you lean on are the things that don’t last
Well it’s just now and then my line gets cast into these
Time passages
There’s something back here that you left behind
Oh time passages
Buy me a ticket on the last train home tonight

Al Stewart picture from flickr, courtesy of ac4lt.

2010
01.15

THOSE who know a little of Haiti’s history might have watched the news last night and thought, as I did for a moment: “An earthquake? What next? Poor Haiti is cursed.”

Read this short (about 500 words) history of Haiti to get a little more context of this poor country. I’d written earlier about Haiti, about how people pay money to eat mud.

Here is a link provided by NYT on contributing to the aid to the country.

Powered by ScribeFire.

2010
01.13

One tenet of parenting about which Shanthala and I have had no disagreement at all is spanking. We both agreed that unlike our parents’ generation, we wouldn’t spank Maya, no matter what the circumstances were. Why ? Because we thought that by spanking we were forcing our view on the child violently, that by using violence to enforce a behavior, we were telling her that it was OK to use violence to achieve your goals, that the act was humiliating to a child, possibly even terrorizing. Charity is not the only thing that begins at home. I also thought that once we thought occasional corporal punishment was OK, we would find it easier to spank when we were tired and Maya was cranky. Using the rod is easy, sparing it for an alternative option is not.

Besides these reasons, the data seems to show that spanking is not good for the kids w.r.t their cognitive development and social behavior. For example, a recent study by Duke University’s Center for Child and Family Policy concluded that spanking children when they were very young (1 year or less) slowed their intellectual development and led to aggressive behavior at an older age. Not everybody agrees with the data however. And this article in Wall Street Journal last October shows why:

Statistical analysis of spanking’s effects on cognition are clouded by many complicating factors. Effects can be attributed to the wrong cause, statisticians say; rather than spanking causing problems in children, it is possible that their existing cognitive problems can make spanking more likely. Moreover, any effects of spanking are difficult to measure and probably small. And unlike, say, a study on prescription drugs that removes a misleading placebo effect, no ethical study can assign some children to be spanked. Instead, parents must be trusted to remember and share their disciplinary practices.

The Duke University study was considered methodologically more sound than many other studies on the effects of spanking partly because it showed that kids who had more problems at age one were not getting spanked more at an older age. But still, not everyone is convinced, even if spanking is largely frowned upon in this US of A, an act liable to get you on the front pages if you’re a celebrity. In any case, my reasons for not spanking were not based on whether Maya’s cognitive development was affected.

I was surprised, however, to read that children who were never spanked fared worse than children who had been spanked. In the (now discontinued) blog by the authors of “NurtureShock: New Thinking About Children”, the authors write:

For decades, research on spanking was challenged by the lack of a control group to compare against – almost all kids (90+%) had been spanked at least once, at some time in their early lives. New research shows that now up to 25% of kids are never spanked, so it’s a fair question: How are they turning out? Are they turning out better? Surprisingly, they’re not.

They quote the newly published work by Dr. Marjorie Gunnoe, a Professor of Psychology at Calvin College. She looked at data from a new population study, Portraits of American Life, that is underway that involves 2,600 people and their adolescent children who are interviewed every three years for the next twenty years. Some 25% of the teens in the study say that they’ve never been spanked. She looked at the data for bad outcomes such as antisocial behavior, violence and depression as well as good outcomes such as academic aspirations and rank, hope for their future and volunteer work. They write in the blog:

those who’d been spanked just when they were young—ages 2 to 6—were doing a little better as teenagers than those who’d never been spanked. On almost every measure.

A separate group of teens had been spanked until they were in elementary school. Their last spanking had been between the ages of 7 and 11. These teens didn’t turn out badly, either.

Compared with the never-spanked, they were slightly worse off on negative outcomes, but a little better off on the good outcomes.

Only the teenagers who were still being spanked clearly showed problems.”

The authors speculate that a possible reason for this is that progressive dads (defined as dads who can function as moms) are inconsistent when it comes to enforcing discipline. They quote the work of Dr. Sarah Schoppe-Sullivan, a developmental psychologist at Ohio State University:

Schoppe-Sullivan found that children of progressive dads were acting out more in school. This was likely because the fathers were inconsistent disciplinarians; they were emotionally uncertain about when and how to punish, and thus they were reinventing the wheel every time they had to reprimand their child. And there was more conflict in their marriage over how best to parent, and how to divide parenting responsibilities.

I admit to taking a leap here, but if the progressive parents are the ones who never spank (or at least there’s a large overlap), then perhaps the consistency of discipline is more important than the form of discipline. In other words, spanking regularly isn’t the problem; the problem is having no regular form of discipline at all.

In an interview with NPR’s Terry Gross, Po Bronson, one of the authors of “Nurture Shock” elaborates further the mindset of progressive dads:

Progressive dads – they imagine this wonderful, you know, tight bond with their kids, and they  haven’t really thought about the fact that disciplining their kid is going to be part of the job. And they don’t necessarily – they know how to be great to their kid and nice to their kid but they don’t necessarily have a strategy for disciplining. And as a result they experiment as discipliners. They – one day they’ll say well, you know, no dessert. And the next day they’ll act really mean to their kid or angry or offended, trying to show their kid what they’ve done is wrong. And then the next day they’ll withdraw some other privilege or say you have to go to bed early and it becomes very inconsistent.

I admit that I find myself vacillating about when to punish or enforce my view. Some cases are easy. For example, wearing a helmet when riding a bike or sitting in the toddler car seat. But others, I’m much less certain about. For example, in India Maya sometimes protests wearing a diaper. I’m not sure what makes her protest. Is it because she feels hot ? Or because she doesn’t want to go out ? If going out is not critical, I let her not wear the diaper and we don’t go out either. I tell her several times: “Maya, no diaper, no park”. Is this being inconsistent ? In our first week here, Maya would insist that she was not tired, going to sleep only when I sat on a stretch out chair holding her. This was troublesome, but I chalked her demand to her being disoriented and jetlagged. Past that first week, she didn’t insist on that behavior. 

When do I take her point of view into consideration and when do I not ? Life is not predictable. Should my response to the situations Maya objects to be that fixed ? I remember reading in a book about non-violence that non-violent alternatives to a situation are difficult to conjure up because we have so little practice. Similarly, finding options that work for both the parents and child are harder than just doing what the parents want. Sigh. Work life seems such a breeze compared to parenting. No wonder many hand the problem over to the mom.

Powered by ScribeFire.

Switch to our mobile site