Safety at Home

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Welcome to the UL community! Share your thoughts with other moms, learn how others are staying safe, get ideas for fun family activities, take our quiz and learn some things you might not expect. Moms often say the best information comes from other moms. We invite you to jump in and explore.

Road tripping with babies and toddlers

August 25th, 2009

By Heather

When you’re on a family road trip, the only thing that beats the sight of a baby sleeping is the sight of a baby sleeping at the right time.


Photo credit: Heather Flett

I can’t promise you perfectly timed naps and roads clear of construction and traffic, but I can give you a few pointers as you plan your getaway. Before you pull out of the driveway, consider these tips:

1. Car. Get your car serviced before you get on the road. Increase your peace of mind with a full tank of gas, properly inflated tires and a carwash, too.
2. Maps. Know your best route before you start driving. Bring along maps or a handy dandy GPS unit.
3. Schedule. Plan your driving times to coincide with nap times, if at all possible. Bring along pacifiers, loveys and sleepytime music to encourage the rest.
4. Food. Pack a little cooler for chilled sippy cups of milk and healthy snacks for rest breaks. Please DO NOT give your child baby carrots or any choking hazard while driving.
5. Toys. With two little guys in car seats in the backseat, I keep a tote bag filled with toys and books they can reach themselves. No crayons … nothing with small pieces.
6. Music. Fill your iPod or make a mix CD of favorite kid’s music in addition to your own.
7. Rest. Expect that you’ll need to stop and stretch (or run!!) for about 20 minutes every two hours … at least.

Most importantly, keep your expectations in check. As long as you expect it to be a wild adventure with some tears and much, much slower than you’d travel on your own, you will have a great time!

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Phone Numbers You Don’t Want to Need

August 20th, 2009

By Whitney

My husband has had the same cell phone number for 10 years. You can imagine how surprised I was when I began to dial his cell phone number from my home phone one day and couldn’t remember the order of the digits. Why did I suffer this memory loss? Two minutes earlier, my 4-year-old son had run full speed ahead into a doorway and was now cradled in my arms, bleeding profusely from the forehead. And my cell phone was acting wonky. And my two-year-old was clinging to my leg. And my home phone is not programmed with speed dial numbers because, well, I have a cell phone that does that.

So there I was, carrying my bleeding kid around the house, searching for a scrap of paper on which I may have written my husband’s cell phone number for a babysitter, cursing myself for having not kept it on the fridge like I did when my son was first born and my habits were more safety conscious.

Safety tip #1: Do not rely on memory or technology for phone numbers. Use the old-fashioned method of posting critical information on the fridge.

Later that week, as I repeated this now funny anecdote to some other moms as we sat waiting for our children’s swimming lessons to end, our conversation turned to 9-1-1. I had not forgotten the conveniently short number 9-1-1 during the head-bleeding incident. But, I knew that the wound I was dealing with, which required one stitch across the eyebrow, did not merit a 9-1-1 call. (I had lost my memory, but not my mind.)

When I have called 9-1-1 in the past, I told the other moms, I have waited a long time for my call to be answered. Also, a 9-1-1 call placed from a cell phone may not be identifiable to the call center in terms of location. The call is picked up by the nearest cell tower and then dispatched to the appropriate local law enforcement agency. If you are in a true emergency and call 9-1-1 from your cell, be sure to provide your location clearly.)

Safety tip #2: Look up your local police dispatch phone number and program it into your phone. Use “9-1-1”as the contact name to force your electronic address book to list it first.

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Nice to meetcha!

January 26th, 2009

We are Heather Flett and Whitney Moss and we’ll be your hostesses on this blog. We both live in Berkeley, CA and we both have two children. Since becoming moms, we struggle to balance keeping everyone safe with having fun. This blog will explore some of the many aspects of safety as we face it in our everyday lives. We hope you’ll join us and help make this blog a dialogue that we can all learn from.

We write another blog together at RookieMoms.com and just published our first book, The Rookie Mom’s Handbook.

We love hot chocolate, comfortable shoes, and the television show Lost, but that’s where the similarities end. Now we need to stop using “we” and introduce ourselves separately.

Read the rest of this entry »

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