It was a snowy morning here at our place! Â The little bear shoveled snow around on the patio for a good 45 minutes before breakfast was ready – his eyes bright.

Hubby and I cooked pancakes & sipped our coffee & tea listening to the little monkey chatter. Â I love how warm and cozy it feels inside while watching the huge flakes fall from the sky!
We headed up Burnaby mountain and met with some friends for some sledding.
The little bear spent the first 45 min rolling around and crawling through the snow on his own – just experimenting with this unfamiliar substance I suppose! Â That gave hubby & I a chance to go sledding! Â I’d forgotten how much fun it was! Â It took a little convincing to get me on the sled at first, but I’m so glad we did it – glad I could keep my feet and knees in despite the big belly to get some good speed on our sled – what a blast! Â I laughed like a kid all the way down the hill.
The little bear and I made a snowman, and then we convinced him to give sledding a try. Â Hubby and the little monkey went home while the little bear and I kept on going with the fun in the snow. Â He did a few good runs down the hill, and then we had a snowball fight. Â He thought it was hilarious when I got him in the face and his mouth filled with snow! Â What a good sport. Â We were out there for a good couple of hours – he had such a blast and it warmed my heart to see him enjoying the snow so much. Â Coming from northern BC I have such fond memories of playing in the snow as a child – it was precious to see my little one enjoying it too.
Tagged parenting, sledding, snow, winter activity
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Little bear LOVES lip balm! Â He can’t get enough of it. Â So it was the perfect thing to share with his friends on his birthday at preschool. Â A friend had given me some empty lip balm tubes, mango butter, and beeswax she wasn’t using so I was all set! Â The little bear had a great time helping me weigh out and mix the ingredients too.
Here’s how to make them:
Combine these ingredients in a pyrex measuring jug and place them in a saucepan of water on the stove. Â Â Mix the ingredients well once fully melted, and remove from heat. Â At this point add 10-12 drops of essential oil of your choice. Â I chose to use mandarin and chamomile as they are both safe essential oils for young children, and are soothing/calming (I think most preschoolers can use some calming at least a couple of times a day
).  Other nice oils to use are peppermint, lavender, lime, tea tree, grapefruit or vanilla.
Once the essential oils have been mixed in, pour it into the lip balm containers until they look slightly too full! Â The lip balms will shrink as they cool. Â Allow the lip balms to cool completely before putting the lids on.
To label ours I just took some old craft paper of ours and cut it to fit the containers (1.9″X2.5″), glued it to the containers and then printed the children’s names on to printable labels.
A conversation I find myself having with many clients, friends, and myself
is about the decisions we make around schedules vs no schedule, co-sleeping vs sleeping separetly, and how all these decisions impact our children as they get older. So what do you do? We receive a huge range of opinions and advice from various friends, family members, books and websites. What’s the right answer? If we respond to a crying toddler every time they make a sound are we spoiling them? If we sleep with our babies are we setting them up for sleep issues in the future? If we let children cry it out are we damaging them? if we respond to them crying are we damaging them?

Baby Bear at 3 days old!
So here are my thoughts:
First – despite the sleep deprevation, the various ideas we have coming at us from every angle, and our worries about the future I really feel the most important thing we can do (or try to do) is be present – think about the now and how you feel in your gut. Every mother is different, every baby is different, and every mother and baby’s relationship is slightly different! So there is no recipe.  There is no “right” answer to any of these questions except the right answer for you and your baby’s unique needs and wants. If you feel instintctually that one way or another is better for your baby, then listen to that. Try not to worry about the future and what you are setting up for you and your child because if you are acting from a place of love you are doing the best thing you can. Which leads to my second point…
Secondly – be aware of your own needs. You may have certain beliefs, and sometimes they collide with your own sanity! What I mean by this is: you may believe that you should let your baby cry it out, you’ve been told this is what they have to do, and you believe it – you may find that you really feel terrible hearing them cry for X amount of time, and it’s actually affecting your stress levels. If you find that your stress is higher, you’re not taking care of your needs. On the other hand – you may believe that co-sleeping is the way to go, you may believe in rocking your baby to sleep etc., and you may find that your stress levels are affected because you personally aren’t getting enough sleep. This is where the balancing act comes in with checking in with your intuitive sense of what to do, and also recognizing your own needs.
My personal experience (thus far) – I thought I would co-sleep with my son indefinitely, I thought I would nurse him until he was 2, and I thought many other things before I began parenting! I co-slept with my son until he was 9 months old (or there abouts). I loved it most of the time, and then towards the end I found that he was nursing frequently in the night, rolling around and kicking me accidentally in his sleep, and overall I was not getting an appropriate amount of sleep for my own needs.  I was a single mother living alone, and I thought this would make the perfect situation for my son to decide on his own when to leave my bed, but in the end I decided I needed my space and my sleep, and I moved him into his own bed.  Despite what I’d dreamed of while pregnant with him, I decided that it was time for him to sleep on his own, and at 15 months I decided I was finished nursing.

Nursing
I weaned my son, and wondered if I was doing the right thing – but I had to listen to my body, and I was exhausted! Â I hear of some babies weaning themselves before a year – and I think if I’d let my son self-wean if would have been 3 or 4 years. Â I admire people that nurse their children until they themselves are ready – it requires a lot of energy to keep producing the milk, and it also requires self sacrifice of allowing your child access to your body. Â Don’t get me wrong – I can’t WAIT to nurse the baby currently in my belly, I have many fond memories of nursing my son, and at times still miss those moments. Â I just reached a point where it wasn’t enjoyable for me anymore, and it was something I wanted to end while it was still positive before resenting it! Â I had moments when my son was 2 where I wondered if I’d made the right decision, I questioned the choices I’d been making along the way, but now he is 4 and I feel good about how secure, confident, and well adjusted he is.

Baby bear carrying his Cabbage Patch Kid in a sling
It gives me confidence to take each moment as it comes, to listen to my baby, to listen to my heart, and to trust that if I act from a place of love for my child & myself all will be well.
What I’m taking from my last experience with a baby into this one is to be more relaxed about it all!  If I could share one thing with new / first time moms (and what I will be re-reading here in the difficult moments) is that all you can do is your best, and that IS enough!  Love your baby, love yourself, and all will be well.  Don’t be afraid to ask for help when you need it (goodness knows I did!  11pm calls to my best friend / dad when I had to change the bedding for the 3rd time after baby bear puked / pooped on everything & he STILL wasn’t sleepy), try to take the pieces of advice (from the many people that offer it) that ring true for you and ignore the rest, and above all remember time changes all!  If it seems like your baby will never sleep through the night, know that this is temporary.  If you’re struggling to get the latch right or master nursing while lying down – know that it won’t be long before that is a distant memory.  If your baby has a couple of fussy days, don’t worry – soon he / she will be cooing, smiling, and melting your heart once again.
Loving and taking care of yourself enables you to be the best mother. Â Regardless of where you choose to have your baby sleep, how you choose to feed your baby, whether you wear your baby or push him in a stroller, when you choose to leave your baby with a friend or family member for a break: love is really all our babies need to grow into their loving selves. Â Enjoy yourself, and enjoy them! Â Happy mothering!
Also posted in Birth and Postpartum Doula
Tagged expectations, new mom, parenting, parenting style
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Well, I suppose no matter how big they get – our children will always be our “babies”. Â My little bear (almost 4) is asleep in his bed. Â His usual rising time is 7:00 am – if not before! Â Today at 8:30 I have been in and out of his room to dress & ready his brother, prepared his preschool snack & readied myself, and still he is sleeping! Â Preschool starts in 45 min and I have such a strong urge to scrap it for the day, work from home for the morning and let him sleep. Â Last night I knew he was exhausted – he was in a very fragile mood. Â No matter what any one of us said, or even if one of us looked at him he would start to cry & talk about wanting to be alone etc. Â This isn’t like him at all, so I knew he was exhausted. Â I had no idea he’d actually sleep in so late!
Why can’t they do that on the weekends? I’d love it if he slept in this late when I didn’t have to get up for work! Â Ah well, we all need a little extra sleep at times. Â I’m just glad his body is allowing him this extra sleep he needs – regardless of the day!
After another whirlwind holiday filled with far more trips to the malls & stores than I’d like, far more “I wants” from the children than I’d imagined, and frantic hands tearing wrapping paper off countless gifts, we were left feeling a bit depleted.  When did my 4 yr old suddenly start thinking Christmas was about all the presents? (of course children get excited by the gifts, but I was horrified to think this was ALL he was excited about).  When did I start feeling the need to spend vast quantities of money on gifts for my kids, their cousins, their friends etc., when there was very little out of this hoard that would have much lasting impact, and even less that they actually needed. To tell you the truth there are 3 gifts left, still in wrapping, on top of our book shelf because we felt that they had had so many gifts in the days surrounding Christmas that there was literally no point in them opening anymore!
I’m all for giving gifts – in fact I love giving gifts! Â I’m not all for filling cupboards, closets & landfills with useless junk that barely got any use… Â I’ve started to feel a huge amount of guilt about the amount we throw out – packaging, wrapping paper, and even toys themselves. Â I wonder; if the children had fewer toys if they would take better care of them? would they enjoy them more? Â would they actually know everything that they had? Â Ok, so it’s a bit of an extreme rant, but I am pregnant – nesting & getting those ‘I want to spend our money wisely, and contribute positively to the longevity of this planet!” sorts of feelings. Â Something else about me is I tend to need to go to extremes to achieve something – if I don’t tell myself “nothing new!” if I just told myself “we’ll cut back…” nothing much would change… Â So thus my New Year’s Resolution was born!

We are not buying anything new! Â All clothes, toys, sports gear, furniture etc. will be purchased used! Â I know toys may still get broken, and it was all new at some point, but it really makes me feel like we are doing the right thing by not purchasing new, and asking people buying gifts to do the same. Â I’ve asked that for my son’s 4th birthday people either re-gift something they don’t use, make something, or buy consignment any gifts they bring. Â Another wonderful bonus to this, is that the grandparents are coming up with their own echo-friendly choices & buying the gifts of dance classes and a family pass to Science World! Â I’m all for gifts like that!
When it came to planning the party itself I was feeling a little torn.  The last couple of years I’ve gone all out for both of the boys’ birthdays.  They picked a theme & I got the appropriate piniata, paper plates, napkins, table cloth, streamers, balloons (including a bouqet of helium balloons), cupcake wrappers, paper poster game, loot bags…  Here I am trying to stick to my 4 R’s and my son wants a Buzz Light-year themed 4th birthday party!  Obviously I’m not going to go and buy disposable plates, napkins, piniata or table cloth this year…. I just can’t do that!  It would all be bought new, and it would all be thrown out at the end of the day.  So how do I do this?  I need to get over my desire to provide the all out matching theme & use our regular plates & cups – we really do have enough.  Do I make a piniata? Unfortunately I’m not really that creative…or artistic…I’m worried if I tried to make a buzz light year piniata it would turn out looking like a mountain and the kids would be terribly confused…and disappointed.  The balloons I’m really still feeling torn on – what’s a party without balloons? but then again, they are so terrible for the environment…maybe I can make recyclable paper decorations to hang from the ceiling? Then when the party is finished he can put them up in his room? or the kids can take one home each as part of their goodie bag?  The jury is still out on this one…I don’t know if we can give up the balloons…I’ll let you know what I decide.
As for the goodie bags, now THIS I have figured out.  I have to scale back from my past years’ goodie bags, BUT I want it to be things the kids will get use out of, and I’m REALLY trying not to buy new.  So – I have a friend that inherited some skin care making supplies through the purchase of a business, but she doesn’t make skin care products & really didn’t know what to do with it all.  She asked if I’d like to buy some stuff off her so I headed over to her place & found a box of goodies!!!  Lip balm tubes, beeswax, pretty little boxes & tins, and many more things I can use for future projects!
I can’t wait to get all the details for his birthday figured out & I’ll be sure to post an update!
My 2 yr old still loves his bed time massage! Soothing chamomile and mandarin make this Baby Oil sweet and soft.
Not long ago I was providing postpartum care to a family that had just had twins. The twins were often gassy and restless at night. The mom was becoming exhausted and was making efforts to increase their sleep at night. I recommended the Sweet Baby Massage & Bath Oil to add to the bath simply to help them relax and soften their skin, I explained that the Sweet Baby Oil was also helpful for colicky babies because of the mandarin essential oil.
Used in a gentle massage this oil helps relieve cramping and gas (Natural Creation Sweet Baby Oil has the perfect ratio of pure mandarin essential oil and a soothing apricot kernel base oil). One day I arrived at the house after a few days away, and the mom told me the twins had been sleeping well! She was so relieved to get some sleep at night, and told me what a difference the oil had made. She and her husband had started adding the Sweet Baby Massage & Bath Oil to the bed time routine, and giving the twins a gentle massage with it before bed – she was amazed at how it relieved their gassy tummies and soothed them into a deeper and longer sleep!
As babies get older they rely a lot on the bed time routine to help them sleep. The Sweet Baby Massage & Bath Oil is a perfect addition to this routine. While the mandarin can help relieve gas in a massage, the chamomile is excellent for easing teething pain when the oil is added to their bath. Chamomile also helps relieve eczema and dry skin, especially when combined with the gentle apricot kernel oil.
Take time to connect with your little one and soothe baby with a gentle massage!
Also posted in Products, Vancouver Doula
Tagged calming a colicky baby, how to calm a baby with colic, how to soothe a teething baby
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There is entertainment, fun, and lots to see and do for women of all ages.
Relax With A Massage
Delight In A Makeover
Win a Fabulous Door Prize
Learn from Fascinating Presentations
Magical Entertainment
Savour the Sizzling Cooking Demos
Shop For Gifts and Valuable Information
SPIN & WIN ON THE PRIZE WHEEL
And Much More…
LOCATION
Pearkes Recreation Centre
3100 Tillicum Road
Victoria, BC Canada
This weekend  Natural Creation will have a booth where you can check out and get great deals on many of our wonderful products!
The items we will be selling at discounted prices this weekend include:
Organic Aromatherapy Neck Wraps &Â Eye Pillows
Sunny Citrus Bath Salts! – Bring sunshine to the grey winter days!
and MORE!


We look forward to seeing you there!
Visit the BC Women’s show site for $2 off your ticket!
Also posted in Events
Tagged BC Women's show, Christmas shows, markets, mompreneurs, Victoria trade shows, women in business
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What could be more fun for two 2 yr old boys than jumping in mud puddles?  It was a beautiful day – the rain from the night before left plenty of mud puddles, and the sun had come out to keep them warm while they played – perfect!
Family time is so important. Â Most weekends we’ve had something major we were preparing for or participipating in, but this weekend we had nothing! Â It was glorious! The weekend started with a date night at Horizons Resteraunt followed by a morning of puddle jumping in sunshine – the boys got suited up in their rain gear and had such an amazing time!

muddy puddle jumping
We took them home for their snack and quiet time before heading out to another park to look at ducks and swing on swings.  The whole weekend they were sooo good!  It’s amazing how much easier toddlers are when your focus is simply finding parks and playing with them.  It’s not that the age itself is difficult – it’s that getting things done with a child that age is difficult!  If one can focus on them and their interests it’s a piece of cake!  So here I am in this familiar place of contemplating and altering my parenting according to the age and stage.  Parenting is the most incredibly dynamic and challenging thing I’ve ever attempted – and I love it!  It keeps you on your toes – when they are babies our challenge is getting enough sleep and food while tending to their shorter sleep cycles and seemingly constant need to eat, as they get older the challenge moves to keeping them safe as they explore their boundaries and focused when they’ve developed the ability to wander off in the middle of getting them dressed etc. and keeping them entertained while getting our own tasks done because a set of keys is no longer a source of entertainment!  It better involve gross motor skills for the better part of the day, and intellectual stimulation for a good portion as well.
Ethan at 2.5 yrs can now count to 12 and point out most of the letters in the alphabet and relate them to words -” ‘m’ is for mama, ‘e’ is for Ethan, ‘g’ is for granddad, ‘n’ is for nana, ‘p’ is for pee pee, ‘s’ is for sophia, ‘k’ is for keida…”  and it goes on!  I’m also so happy to hear him singing Twinkle Twinkle all by himself as we drive to the grocery store.  He spends most of his play time at home “fixing” things as he uses a wooden hammer and screwdriver to fix all his toys, he engineers train tracks, and often picks up a bag and grabs Aiden’s hand saying “we’re going to get groceries, come on Aiden”.  When I ask what he is buying he tells me “cereal, milk, and grapes” – all the important foods of course!  If he’s not going to get groceries he’s going to work – he leaves the room for a few minutes telling me “good bye, I’m going to work” and then returns shortly with a very excited “I’m back!”
I’m loving this new age and stage. Â I’m thankful for the support and help I have, because as enjoyable as it is, one must not neglect to mention the effort it takes to answer the many questions of “why?”, “what’s that?”, “what you doing?” and so on, and repetitions of such questions until one gives a satisfactory explanation. Â I’m also thankful for the help because there is of course the sore back that comes with carrying a 50 lb child on ones hip – because at 2 they still need that up time and I just happen to have a very solid 2 yr old!
What a gorgeous child he is – what a beautiful joyous gift to be given – the honour of being a mother, the privelege of caring for an individual as they grow and change, the joy it brings me to provide a safe and loving space for this incredibly unique person to grow and discover himself, his boundaries, his independence, and his place in the world.

The tremendous 2s!
It was 2004 and I was ready to figure out my calling in life. I knew I wanted to be in some area of medicine, but how does one choose which area? I decided to go to overseas and do some volunteer work. There I would get some exposure to a variety of areas of medicine and hopefully I would be able to narrow it down.
I made a spontaneous decision. I traveled to Uganda with an organization called Friends of Mengo to do the groundwork for a study on how selenium supplements affect the quality of life in AIDs patients. This turned into an incredible 6 month adventure. I was given the opportunity to sit in on many surgeries, work with TB patients, do home visits to AIDs patients, and work in an orphanage with several infants as well as toddlers. It was at Sanyu Babies Home where I discovered my maternal instinct. I had no experience with newborns before this trip, and there was a couple of days where I was alone in the nursery feeding and changing 5 babies under 3 months. I quickly learned how to help care for these babies, and grew very attached to many of them.

At Sanyu Babies home in Uganda 2004
I traveled to Kitgum in northern Uganda. Here, I had the honour of shadowing in a maternity ward at St. Joseph’s Hospital. I participated in rounds with the Dr.s and deliveries with the midwives. I was given the opportunity of checking dilation, starting IV’s, and participating in many other medical tasks that helped me to gain a great deal of background knowledge about the process of birth, the physical changes and possibilities in the birthing mother’s body, and a tangible understanding of the changes that occur throughout labour. I watched women labour with such strength, and I saw the ways in which they coped and moved through the intensity.
I was in awe when I saw my first birth. I was amazed at the abilities a woman’s body has to accommodate another being both in pregnancy and in childbirth. I knew then that working with labouring women was my calling.
When I returned to Canada I started a Bio-Psych degree with the goal of going to med school, and I began researching ways to get involved in childbirth. I discovered the role of a doula, and I was fascinated. After much reading and studying, I began my work as a doula. I volunteered at a few births where I gained experience in the emotional and physical support techniques by learning from midwives and nurses.
In June of 2006 I became pregnant with my own son. Â I chose midwifery care and a doula for my birth. Without the support of my midwives Lorna McRae, and (then student midwife) Leah Seibert, and my doula Chelsea Lafrance – I know that I would not have succeeded in having a vaginal birth of a 9lb 6 oz. posterior, asynclitic baby. I gave birth in the hospital with obstetricians and pediatricians present, and I saw how well the midwives and the hospital staff worked together with my doula. Â It has now become my longterm goal to attend the midwifery program, and my interim goal to offer my extensive knowledge, experience, and expertise to help families to achieve their own unique goals in the birthing process. I work well with doctors and midwives, and I am experienced in home births as well as hospital births.
I am here to provide resources and information, choices and solutions, tools and techniques. I am available for your emotional and physical needs, to gently guide partners and loved ones in supporting the labouring mom, and to help you achieve a positive journey. Â It is my role and my joy to empower you in the birth experience, and ultimately as parents.
Birth Doula Services ~ Postpartum Doula Services ~ Contact Me
I was talking with a good friend of mine last night. Â She also happens to be the very talented graphic design artist who helped us achieve the look we wanted with our labels, and has now created for me a beautiful portfoliio so I can better share my experience and the doula services I offer with expectant families here in Vancouver! Â Nadine Staaf is a mother, and an entrepeneur,she works both as a graphic design artist and a remarkable life coach. Â She is a talented, strong, driven, and inspirational woman! Â In our conversation last night I was feeling such excitement for her and the graphic design work that is coming her way, we were discussing a book she has been working on.
It just so happens the author of this book is a friend and doula client of mine.  New mom Kyla Plaxton has recently published her first book: The Little Women’s Guide to Personal Power: How to Turn Your Monthly Menstruation into the Biggest Blessing of Your Life! A book created to empower young women.  Another strong and inspirational woman with a beautiful vision and the drive to succeed.  A mother, who found the epowerment to create this vision of hers after the journey into motherhood.
Another good friend Caitlyn Letson is a strong woman who found empowerment after the birth of her child to become a business founder.  She has created a wonderful children’s consignment store with another mother as her business partner.  Together they opened the doors to Izzy and Ollie’z Childrens Consignment less than a year after the birth of their children.  They carry Natural Creation products from Belly to Baby!  Another link in this amazing circle of mom entrepeneurs supporting and building businesses together and side by side in this incredible journey of empowered motherhood.
I’ve now moved to Vancouver and am reconnecting with yet another good friend who has also started her own business. Â Fantasha Kassam is an empowered mother who is an inspiration and personal trainer to many! Â She runs Fantasha’s Family Fitness encouraging families to excercise together helping moms get back in shape, and encouraging an active lifestyle in our children.
I simply had to share my excitement as I watch these wonderful friends (and myself
) build businesses and empowering lives for ourselves by following our passions and sharing our talents. Â Perhaps it is because of my line of work – working with families through the transitions of welcoming new babies – but I can’t help but grin at the correlation of these women stepping boldly into motherhood, and at the same time leaping into self-employment, and achieving the fine balance of building a business, and raising a child. Â The two have so much in common really, I suppose it only makes sense – we give birth to our children, and with a different kind of labour our businesses are born, we feed, nurture, love, give space, and pour passion in to the hours we spend with both. Â We balance strength and gentleness, drive and patience, we learn every day of new challenges and more so of new joys! Â Each one of the women I’ve mentioned is striving to contribute positively to society, to our world, and to our children’s futures. Â There is something so powerful about what we are doing.
Here’s to the empowerment of motherhood, and the positive changes instigated by that empowerment!