Mamas, don’t let your babies grow up to be….dorm counselors
Reading about the tragic suicides of six Cornell students this academic year, and today’s suicide of a Yale student who jumped off the Empire State building, I am having a bad flashback to my college years.
You see, as a naive first-year student entering Brown University in the fall of 1986, I pictured a rosy and optimistic future with my college classmates. Just one year later I was one of the resident counselors “in charge” of the well-being of about 40 students on our dorm floor. When I started college, I had never known anyone with a major psychiatric illness. And little did I know how many serious problems would present themselves for the first time during the freshman year. Major depression. Manic depression. Relationship violence. Drug use. Pervasive eating disorders, some of them very serious. Suicide.
Looking back, it seems crazy to put 20- and 19-year olds in such a position of responsibility relative to their peers. In other words, having the juniors and sophomores serve as the first-line responders to serious problems in the freshman class seems utterly crazy.
Brown provided what seemed at the time like extensive training for us, with several full days at the beginning of the year, and ongoing support, but the whole college mental health system had a serious weakness: it was nearly impossible to force a student who was in crisis to actually go in for professional counseling, which the university did offer. This led to intensely disturbing situations as a peer counselor. My junior year I was a Head Counselor assigned to the large wing of a dorm, about 40 first-year students on four floors, and three other resident counselors. One of our students was clearly bipolar and she was getting treatment. However, despite everyone’s best efforts to help her, when she returned to campus the following fall, she committed suicide. After that, one of her friends came to me (even though I was no longer officially her peer counselor) and repeatedly told me she was thinking of killing herself. I tried to get her to go to Psych Services but nobody could compel her to go. So in the meantime she had me extremely worried about her well-being and utterly powerless to do anything about it other than tell my supervisors I thought we had an emergency on our hands.
I saw other things that were out of my control, and well beyond my ability to handle: two former best friends getting into a violent late-night fight over a woman, leading one to get his hand slammed in a door; students who had to leave school to get treatment for eating disorders; a “what did I just see?” moment when I wondered whether a fellow counselor had a bag of cocaine in his room. (To this day I am still not sure what was going on with that one. At the time I was incredulous to the point of being unable to know how to analyze what I was seeing or how to follow up on it.)
I don’t know how to reform the college mental health system. I do believe that parents need to be vigilant about checking in with their students and seeing how they are doing over vacation. Dr. Michele Borba has written eloquently about this issue, giving parents the reality check about the fact that not only is 1 in 4 students dropping out in the first year, but also that that depression, stress, and drop-outs peak during the second half of the first year.
In most of my writing I try to be supportive of a whole variety of life paths, career paths, parenting styles, and opportunities to help one another, but I have no evidence to suggest that the peer counseling system in colleges today is on any stronger ground. So if one day my daughter asked me whether I thought she should become a dorm counselor, I would have one strong word of advice for her: Don’t.
Your lifelong career path: moving from “if” you will work, to “when” and “how”
Earlier this week I was interviewed on Lifestyle Radio Cafe, and listening in to the first segment between host Dana Hilmer and financial guru Jean Chatsky got me thinking again about mothers’ lifelong career paths.
It is an issue I have thought about a lot with Mojo Mom and continue to explore in Courageous Parents, Confident Kids. The idea that keeps flashing in my mind like a neon sign is that we need to transform our thoughts about mothers’ employment from “if I am going to work” to “when and how am I going to work?”
I say this in a non-Mommy-Wars way! There is no “us” and “them” in this discussion–it’s ultimately all “us,” no matter how different our personal paths may look. Mothers are each unique individuals, but most of us will need to be employed throughout most of our lives. What I have learned in the past ten years as a mother is that the strong feelings I have about what work-life balance means to me at any moment really can evolve over time. When my daughter was six months old, my top priority was to be home with her, and I couldn’t imagine going back to work at that time. By the time she was a year old I was starting to explore my options for a part-time job. My initial plan to go back to work fell through when we decided to move from California to North Carolina, but by the time my daughter was two and a half, I was really eager to get her into a toddler program, and at age three she started full-day preschool. I ramped up my writing and teaching career back to a flexible but full-time schedule.
In the early years of motherhood a day can feel like an eternity. Coping with your new reality as a mother, just getting used to the “new normal” of the day to day demands can make it very difficult to imagine that life can change yet again. I went from being a “stay-at-home Mom” and embracing that as my identity, to a becoming a working parent and artist.
There are also mothers who continue their careers and couldn’t imagine it any other way…until life throws them a curveball and they, too, must adapt.
I respect a whole variety of life paths, but I have reached the point where I operate from a perspective that women should keep their lifelong career paths in mind and treat their employability as an important family priority. Whether you take off three weeks from paid employment, three years, or even longer, what steps can you take to stay positioned to reinvent yourself and return to work when you want to or need to? In this economy, the need to case is an important one to consider.
The working world is on the brink of change, with more people wanting flexible employment for a number of reasons: Boomers who want to continue working part-time instead of retiring; Milennials who can’t imagine having to show up in one place for 40 hours a week when they know they can get their work done from a cafe. But working parents are the true pioneers advocating for flexible employment and results-only work environments, in which it doesn’t matter when and where you work, as long as you get it done.
It’s not always easy to secure such an arrangement, and it’s not always comfortable to be on the leading edge, but it is worth fighting for a work world that works for us. Women’s lives don’t necessarily follow the “ladders” laid out by traditionally male-dominated professions–think tenure track in academia, or the rigorous path of medical school and residency. But it’s always inspiring to see women carving out a path that works for them, whether it’s a mother of two starting law school after her kids are in elementary school, or a woman going out on her own to launch her own business or consulting company.
Sometimes the hardest part is getting started–knowing when you are ready to embark on a new job search or career switch. It can be hard to find guidance on those initial steps getting prepared and setting priorities even before you draft a new resume. So I am very happy to have teamed up with the career experts at Balancing Professionals to provide the practical guidance that so many parents need. Kella Hatcher and Maryanne Perrin are experts on flexible employment, working with both employers and job seekers. They have contributed a chapter to Courageous Parents, Confident Kids sharing “Tools for Career Reinvention.” They share provide an introduction to on-ramping and career reshaping, providing actionable advice in their chapter, which will provide insight for both mothers and fathers. If you are ready to dive more fully into the process, you can get a in-depth guidance for going back to work in Kella and Maryanne’s new resource, The On-Ramping Guide: Tips, Exercises and Important Job Search Steps for Returning to Work After Time Out Raising Kids, available now in the Mojo Store.
So no matter where you are on your career path, see what it feels like to ask yourself when and how you’d like to work, and if that requires making a change, begin investigating the steps you can take to get to create a career path that works for you and your family.
Sign up on the MojoMom.com home page to receive a free digital download on the brand-new book “Courageous Parents, Confident Kids” when it is released on April 19th. You can read the book on an ordinary computer or print it out–no Kindle or special e-book reader is required.
Welcome TODAYMoms Blog Readers!
I was invited to contribute an article to the TODAYMoms blog and I’ve had a great response to my post, “4 tips to ground helicopter parenting – for good!”
I will be the first to admit that sometimes I hover too closely over my daughter, and get involved in issues she can really handle on her own. But I am trying to be more conscious about letting her solve her own problems as much as she can. I know she’s a capable person! Now that she’s 10 years old she’s not shy about telling me when I am butting in, and I have to admit that when she brings it up, she’s usually right.
That’s why I gathered 14 talented experts to collaborate on our new book Courageous Parents, Confident Kids–Letting Go So You Both Can Grow. While I had plenty to say on this topic, I knew I did not have all the answers. Between the 14 of us we cover a breadth and depth of expertise that we can be proud of. We aim to give you practical skills, as well as support for creating your own path to courageous parenting.
So welcome TODAYMoms blog readers, and while you are here on MojoMom.com, be sure to sign up for to receive the free digital download of “Courageous Parents, Confident Kids” when the new book is released on April 19th.
Mojo Mom and Jean Chatzky, today on Lifestyle Mom Radio Cafe
I’m going to be a guest on Lifestyle Mom Radio Cafe today, interviewed by host Dana Hilmer. The show airs live at 1 pm Eastern/10 am Pacific. The first guest will be financial expert Jean Chatzky (whom I love!) and the I’ll come on around 1:25 pm.
You can listen in live online to LA Talk Radio–we’re on channel 2. You can even call in to chat with us, (818) 602-4929 or send an email with a question for Dana to ask me or Jean Chatzky: dana@lifestylemom.com
Here’s a preview of today’s show:
Own Your Money Life and to Let Go (Just a bit!) for the Sake of Raising Confident Kids
Today’s guests, Jean Chatzky and Amy Tiemann are sure to spark some really smart conversation that will spur you to take control of both your financial and parenting lives. Our first guest, TODAY Show Financial Editor Jean Chatzky will be sharing with us some of things you should consider, financially speaking, when deciding to work versus stay home with the kids, the benefits and possible pitfalls to working from home, and getting out of your own way so you can make money, not excuses. Amy Tiemann, the Mojo Mom (love that name!), will be chatting with us today about how we parents need to rise to the challenge of being courageous so that we can successfully raise confident kids. We hope you join us!
Jean Chatzky is the financial editor of NBC’s TODAY Show and is known by millions for her incredible ability to make difficult financial subjects understandable to everyday people. Jean hosts her own show on Oprah radio, she is a featured columnist for More magazine and the New York Daily News and she is the author of numerous books, the most recent being Money 911: Your Most Pressing Money Questions Answered, Your Money Emergencies Solved. She is also the author of Pay it Down, Make Money Not Excuses (specifically targeting we women!) and The Difference, the focus of which is to help people thrive in a tough economy. For more information go to www.JeanChatzky.com.
Amy Tiemann, Ph.D. is a multimedia publisher, educator, and catalyst for social change. She is the celebrated author of Mojo Mom and founder of MojoMom.com. Tiemann reaches a global audience through her books, articles, podcasts, national radio tours and TV appearances, including NBC’s TODAY Show. She collaborates with the contributors to the new book, Courageous Parents, Confident Kids, to lead the way to a new era of empowered parenting, based on creativity, connection, and action.
About The LifestyleMom Radio Café
The LifestyleMom Radio Café is an internet talk radio show for women who crave information, inspiration and lively girlfriend-to- girlfriend conversation about the topics that matter to them most. Host Dana Hilmer serves up a delicious blend of entertaining and thought-provoking banter with some of today’s most inspiring women. Pull up a chair, pour yourself a fresh cup and enjoy!
Listen LIVE
www.LATalkRadio.com
Tuesdays 10:00 AM PST (1:00 PM EST)
Listen to Podcast at Your Convenience
www.LifestyleMom.com
www.LATalkRadio.com
iTunes
Join the Conversation
Call-in during the show and chat with us
(818) 602-4929
If you cannot call-in please feel free to submit a question for the guest and it will be asked on the show. Email your question to dana@lifestylemom.com
We hope you can join us!
Hooray for Health Care–writing as an Entrepreneur and a Mom
As someone who has worked with MomsRising.org to accomplish the goal of securing healthcare for American kids, I am cheering the news that we have taken a step closer toward achieving health care for all.
I could write as a Mom and share plenty of emotional stories, including going to the playground when my family visited France, and being moved to tears by realizing how amazing it felt to know that all the kids playing there had health care.
But in addition to being a motherhood blogger, I am a publisher and entrepreneur. That influences my view on health care just as much as being a Mom does, and it gives me even more reason to cheer today. In this era of extreme unemployment and financial crisis, people are wondering where the jobs of the future are going to come from. In most cases, the new opportunities are not going to look like the jobs of the past, spending 40 hours a week working in a factory, or spending 20 years with one employer.
My writing and publishing business is a case in point. Right now with the production of the new book Courageous Parents, Confident Kids, I have been generating lot of work for freelancers, good work that pays skilled professionals $20, $50, $75 an hour. I might pay a freelancer $3000 in one month when we are rolling full steam ahead to publish a new book. But we operate like a highly dynamic flash mob. We come together for intense projects, work really hard, and then when the book is done, go our own ways until it is time to make the next book.
These freelancers are welcome to work for anyone else they like, but they don’t have one employer to rely on to provide health care under our current employer-based model, which came about largely an accident of history dates back to World War II, when big employers like car manufacturers folded in lots of benefits work around salary caps.
This does not resemble my work world at all, which is nimble, entrepreneurial, and decentralized. I work with cover designers in Wisconsin, an editor and book designer in Minnesota, an illustrator in Florida, and a web designer in Mexico. (I know more than one US expat who earns income in American dollars, but pays for daily expenses in pesos, living Timothy Ferriss’ 4-Hour Workweek dream.) I have worked with some of these talented collaborators on multiple, major projects without ever meeting them in person (though I would love to one day!), so even the concept of the “Best Cities to find a Job In” feels like a rather outmoded idea to me. I would much rather develop my skill set to deploy wherever I want to be, and pick a great place to live–which I have found in North Carolina!
This type of entrepreneurial, freelance job creation ties directly into the need for health care reform, because freelancers are generally in the pool of the 9% of Americans who have been really getting a terrible deal shopping for health insurance on the open market, which has been so abusive to consumers (for a good discussion of this issue, listen to last Friday’s Diane Rehm Show). I’ve felt terrible that the people who have done such great work for me did not necessarily have great health insurance, or any at all. Now thanks to the hard work of all who pushed for health care reform, some immediate changes will help freelancers, such as immediate access to insurance for people who are uninsured because of a pre-existing condition, who can now get coverage through a temporary high-risk pool.
Frankly, if we were starting from scratch I don’t think we would have come up with the crazy, complicated and bureaucratic health delivery system we have now, but being grounded in the divisive political realities we face, I am very grateful for this step in the right direction of health insurance reform.
Mojo Mom Podcast with “Free-Range Kids” author Lenore Skenazy
I had a great time talking to Lenore Skenazy this week for The Mojo Mom Podcast. She has so much energy and spirit. Our conversation blew right past the usual half hour mark so consider this a bonus episode!
Listen in:
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
This week’s Amy Tiemann talks to kindred spirit Lenore Skenazy, author of the book Free-Range Kids and founder of FreeRangeKids.com.
Lenore has been at the forefront advancing the trend of giving kids more independence and ability to roam and explore. Her work was one of the inspirations for Amy Tiemann to join this cultural conversation with the creation of the new parenting resource, Courageous Parents, Confident Kids.
So join Amy and Lenore for a wide-ranging discussion!
One more bit of resonance: next month on April 19th, the new paperback edition of Free-Range Kids: How to Raise Safe, Self-Reliant Children (Without Going Nuts with Worry) will be published the same day as the launch of Amy’s special free digital download offer for Courageous Parents, Confident Kids: Letting Go So You Both Can Grow. Visit MojoMom.com to learn more about Amy’s limited-time offer.
Stress less: Free webinar training tonight about “Getting Kids to Listen”
Join me tonight for a free webinar training featuring Amy McCready of Positive Parenting Solutions teaching strategies for “Getting Kids to Listen: The 5 R’s of Fair and Effective Consequences.”
We’ll gather online tonight from 9 to 10 pm Eastern time for this live, interactive training.
Amy McCready is a wonderful parent educator and I can attest that her techniques are effective and respectful. My husband and I have taken the full Positive Parenting Solutions training and we use the strategies we learned from Amy every day.
Please register on the Positive Parenting Solutions website to sign up for this complimentary training. I hope you’ll join us tonight.
Getting my head back on straight!
This past week has been a real head-spinner. I am so proud that we got the new and improved MojoMom.com website launched, but I have not had much time since then to blog or even think!
For the past two weeks I have been in the final, intense phases of book production for Courageous Parents, Confident Kids–nailing down every last detail on the contents and design elements. We’re going to press this week to meet our April 19th paperback and e-book release date. The schedule is coming down to the wire, which was part of the plan to create a timely book, but I really started to feel the effects of the stress this week when I hit a wall of insomnia. When I did sleep I would dream about the book, and when I was awake I would copyedit everything I saw. I walked by a movie poster for the new release “She’s Out of My League” with the tagline, “How can a 10 go for a 5?” I immediately thought, that’s the wrong tag line. It should be “Why does a 10 go for a 5?” (Because you know it would work for a hot girl to go after a not-so-hot guy.) You may agree or not with my edit but the point was that I couldn’t stop myself from thinking about it!
I came across a passage from Henri Nouwen that mirrored how roiled up I am feeling inside. Fortunately this feeling has begun to calm down for me:
As soon as we are alone…inner chaos opens up in us. This chaos can be so disturbing and so confusing that we can hardly wait to get busy again. Entering a private room and shuttering the door, therefore, does not mean we shutter out all our inner doubts, anxieties, fears, bad memories, unresolved conflicts, angry feelings and impulsive desires. On the contrary, when we have removed our outer distraction, we often find that our inner distractions manifest themselves to us in full force. We often use the outer distractions to shield ourselves from the interior noises. This make the discipline of solitude even more important. –Henri J. M. Nouwen, Making All Things New and Other Classics
Don’t get me wrong, I love finishing a new book! But it’s such a busy time that it stirs up the mind and challenges me to settle down again. I am hoping to get my wise friend Karen Maezen Miller to come on The Mojo Mom Podcast soon to talk about these issues, which she discusses so lyrically in her new book to be released April first, Hand Wash Cold: Care Instructions for an Ordinary Life.
Reinventing MojoMom.com
Welcome to the new MojoMom.com! After seven years it became clear that it was time to totally reinvent my website, so my original web designer Patty Ayers and I really went for it–blowing up our dear old site and replacing it with a new one that offers a host of new features in one place.
It’s amazing for me to remember back to 2003 when I started launched the original MojoMom.com and think about how much has changed since then. Back in those early days I had to strike a balance between developing the website and working on finishing my book Mojo Mom: Nurturing Your Self While Raising a Family but I knew from the very start that a interactive online presence was important to me.
Since then, wow, now we practically live our lives online! It’s amazing to think I’ve been at this since “blogging” was a new idea, and “podcasting” had not yet been invented!
So as much as I loved my original online home, now it’s time to move out of my little bungalow and into much roomier digs. The great news is on the new site, there is plenty of room to invite in readers and experts and create new opportunities to interact.
The first “Classes and Events” offering that I am hosting is a free webinar training about “Getting Kids to Listen: The 5 R’s of Fair and Effective Consequences” taught by Positive Parenting Solutions founder Amy McCready. I hope you can join us for this training, designed for parents of kids ages 1 to 16–who doesn’t need help in the area of good communication? We’ll be convening online for this live event on on Thursday March 18 from 9 to 10 pm ET.
You can learn more about the training on our MojoMom.com “Classes and Events” page [internal mojomom.com page link] or you can follow this link directly to the official registration page on PositiveParentingSolutions.com
I have such respect for Amy McCready’s teaching. I can tell you from personal experience that her Positive Parenting strategies are respectful, effective, and definitely work to build capable, competent kids–and parents who know how to let kids take on independence and responsibility!
While you are exploring the new MojoMom.com be sure to sign up for our free digital download offer for my next book, Courageous Parents, Confident Kids — Letting Go So You Both Can Grow. I am very proud of this new resource that I’ve created in collaboration with 14 fantastic experts. This is a limited pre-publication offer — one you don’t want to miss! Sign up now and when the new book Courageous Parents, Confident Kids is released on April 19th, we will tell you how to download the entire book for free. The digital book will be delivered in PDF format that you can read on an ordinary computer screen (no e-book reader required) or print out at your convenience.
Our mission is to reach as many parents as we can with this practical and helpful new resource we have created. I hope you’ll use the new “ShareThis” feature on the blog to tell your friends!
Mojo Mom Podcast with Renee Trudeau and The Mother’s Guide to Self-Renewal
This week I continue my podcast conversations with Courageous Parents, Confident Kids book contributors, talking to Renee Trudeau about the absolutely essential need for mothers to practice self-care. Renee knows that it’s not always easy to practice self care–we each live that challenge every day, and Renee provides a warm and wise voice to help support and guide us. What I love most about Renee’s work is that she is committed to helping each woman unlock her own potential and talents, and showing us how to work together with other women to bring out the best in each of us.
Listen in to this week’s show:
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.
Renee Trudeau has written extensively about self-care in her book “The Mother’s Guide to Self-Renewal,” and her training that teaches women how to form and facilitate their own Personal Renewal Groups. Podcast host Amy Tiemann has also written about self-care as a core principle in “Mojo Mom: Nurturing Your Self While Raising a Family.” So these two have a lot to talk about!
Listen in to find out why mothers in particular have a hard time claiming their own self care as a top priority, why it’s really important to learn how to do so, and how to get started. Then make sure you register on MojoMom.com to reserve a free digital download of the new book that is a collaboration between Amy, Renee, and 12 other experts, “Courageous Parents, Confident Kids–Letting Go So You Both Can Grow.”
Sign up now and we’ll send you a free digital download of the new book when it’s released on April 19, 2010.











