Overcoming Obstacles: Toddler Tantrums

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Overcoming Obstacles Toddler Tantrums (3)Have you ever had a day that you were really excited for a hike, miraculously left on time, and got to the trail head early, started the hike on a high note, and then everything fell apart? This describes my day a few weeks ago. We had a farewell hike for one of our beloved branch leads who is moving away and I was looking forward to the hike and to seeing our friends… and particularly to getting out... for me.  Overcoming Obstacles Toddler Tantrums (1)The hike even started out on the right foot, so to speak. Despite a surprise snowfall, because of my fantastic planning skills unwillingness to remove any gear from my car (because I might neeed it), we were both, for the most part, appropriately attired. My 2 year old was raring to go and actually started up the mountain before our welcome circle. In retrospect, I should have let him go, but we stopped because that was actually a different trail than the group was doing.  I slowed him down, and redirected him to the group, where I bribed him with cookies. Since we were doing a walking kid hike, I even thought I would see how he did and planned to let him walk. Overcoming Obstacles Toddler Tantrums (2)As we took off, things went downhill… he thought that the snow was REALLY interesting… as were the leaves, his mittens, and every tree and rock that peeked through the snow.  He threw tantrums every time I tried to move him along the trail.  Epic tantrums – with kicking, screaming, and hitting… and BIG tears. I didn’t cry too, but I really wanted to. He was also fiercely possessive of his “hik pol” and tantrums increased whenever I tried to redirect him and get him to let me hold it. We only managed about 5 feet at a time. This is also the one day I decided not to bring a water bottle or snacks, because the last 10 short hikes we’ve done, he has refused them, so naturally, the one time I didn’t have them, they perhaps would have helped. I refer to the phenomenon not as Murphy’s Law but Toddler’s Law. I didn't get photos of the major drama, the lying in the middle of the trail, the kicking, screaming, or crying, but I KNOW that everyone can picture their own toddler doing the same thing. With my tears approaching, I loaded him up into the carrier on my back, and started further down the trail with my angry 2 year old. We hadn’t gone far before we ran into a friend who had turned around due to a 2 year old meltdown. I sighed, and decided she had the right idea, and we turned around together. In the short distance to the trailhead, there were at least 5 more angry outbursts. It was so disappointing to me to not finish the hike, and I felt helpless as most of my tantrum survival techniques don’t work that well in the middle of a trail. At the car, he acted as though I had been starving him and ate every snack in sight (he had eaten a large breakfast too). I’d love to say that our day improved and we got back out for another hike later, but candidly, he had a bad day and had to leave his friend’s birthday party later that day because of a bad attitude. It was one of those days that when my husband walked through the door, I handed the toddler off to him, and went and sat in the floor of the shower. I’m having trouble wrapping up this post, and why I chose to write about toddler tantrums as an obstacle to overcome, when I didn’t do so well at overcoming this one myself. 2 year old tantrums are a whole new world for me… they just started a few weeks ago, and I find that my old tricks don’t work so well. The point I would like to make though is that tantrums DO happen, and they happen to every parent. Bad days happen too. They are a fact of life, and they might mean that your hike on a particular day doesn’t go the way you want it to. That in and of itself can be a very difficult pill to swallow, particularly when you NEED to get out for your own sanity.  However, every parent on a hike you’re on WILL understand and if they haven’t gone through it, they’ll experience it one day. My point is... don’t let it get you down. Your plans on a particular day may not go the way you want them to, but there will be other days. Be prepared with snacks and water even if you think you won’t need them, shoot for giggles, and suggest they find the next tree to hug or rock to climb, and when all else fails, if you need to turn around, someone will go with you, and everyone will understand. Hang in there, Mama, Papa, Grandma, Grandpa, Auntie, Uncle, or Nanny… bad days happen to us all, and the next day is an opportunity for another outing. What obstacles have you overcome either to hike or by hiking? Share in the comments below or via this form. Erin PenningsErin Pennings’ main duty in life is making sure that her sweet, but very busy toddler, Emmett, doesn’t dive head first off the highest thing he can climb. She is also a moderately outdoorsy formerly avid traveler, animal lover, and lifestyle blogger who loves food. Follow her adventures on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram @SalmonAtSeven.

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Hiking my Way to Happiness
The joke among my friends for many years was that a depressing day for me was the same as most people’s emotional state on a good day. Then I turned 38, and I won’t go into details, but I reached a point where I couldn’t even talk to my life coach without crying, so she eventually suggestion medication. For the first time, I was depressed with a capital “D”. Things turned around eventually, and in 2013 I got married, became pregnant with my first child, and moved to Portland… an excellent change of scenery after years in Los Angeles. As my due date neared, I started to feel the old dark cloud edging back in. Everywhere I looked I saw stories on postpartum depression. People talked about it in my mama preparation classes and in prenatal yoga. I talked to my doctor about whether I could breastfeed and medicate once I had a child. I was convinced I was doomed to postpartum depression because the memories of my dark place were in the not-so-distant past. It’s estimated close to a million women a year suffer from postpartum depression. The news loves to latch on to stories about women who really go off the deep end. Publications like the Huffington Post and the New York Times often have stories about “lonely mama syndrome” where women wax on about how isolating it is to be a new parent. Believe me when I say that I read every one of those articles word-for-word. When my son arrived I was high with the euphoria of newborn love. But I was also weepy, overwhelmed, bleary eyed and hormone-whacked. One minute I was laughing at my baby pooping 12 times a day, and the next minute I was sobbing about my sore nipples and how exhausted I was. It didn’t help that my husband would just stand there looking at me like I was a stranger and say thing like, “Seriously what’s your problem? You are just sitting here nursing all day. It can’t be THAT tiring?” This, of course, was my mama-brained interpretation and would make me sob harder. 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Even if I did nothing, just sitting outside breathing fresh air made a difference. Then I thought, “what if we could be having this same experience of talking to each other about nursing and dealing with our new lives and our fears outside, instead of in this cozy, safe little room?” While it was lovely, it was also too sheltered and was not helping all of my depression anxiety. I asked the group if anyone wanted to go on a little hike with me. Nothing hard, just a half-mile trail down the street from my house. There was just one thing, I didn’t really know how to use my carrier, so I was scared to go alone. And it wasn’t really a very good stroller trail. The next week, armed with a ridiculous amount of stuff in my BOB stroller I went to a park near my house that had a mellow trail. For this “major” outing I brought a carrier, a days worth of diapers, diaper cream, water, food and who knows what else. 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I locked up the stroller and asked a stranger passing by if she could help me buckle the back of my carrier. I tried to act nonchalant like I totally did this all the time. There were so many things going through my mind. What if Mason had a blow out? Did I bring enough stuff? I couldn’t carry anything but a baby in the carrier. What if I needed to nurse. I had only nursed in the privacy of my home at that point and was still struggling with it. What if he slipped down in the carrier or I just dropped him? What if a scary homeless dude was on the path? What would I do? As I got on trail, I felt the pressure still there in my chest, but with every step the fears and tears started melting away. It was so silent in the forest. The birds got louder, as did the bubbling water in the stream on the side of the trail. Everything was so green and lush in spite of the sweltering July heat. I felt Mason’s sweaty little nearly naked body snuggled up against me. I leaned down and kissed his head and breathed in the new baby smell. I moved so slowly, but with every step I felt a little lighter, a little calmer. That day I walked all the way up the trail to the stone house, doubling the distance I had done with the group the previous day. Along the way Mason got hungry, and I stopped and asked a random couple to unbuckle the carrier. I took my wailing baby to a quiet place off the trail and sat down to nurse. I was nervous and not as graceful as I would have liked, but I did get enough milk in Mason to appease him and get back home. And when my husband came home and I announced that I went hiking alone, I felt so proud of myself. The next week, ten women showed up to join me. It seemed I wasn’t alone in feeling the need to commune with nature and “hike it out”. As the weeks progressed my circle of friends widened and new faces showed up to hike with us. I also noticed something shifting in me. 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Support a NonProfit That Creates Community and Connection this #GivingTuesday
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