Published: Monday, July 2, 2007
Moms: Other moms still offer the best advice
By MELISSA RAYWORTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Though every generation has its own parenting experts, one has always remained constant in the eyes of mothers: another mother.
The Internet has only served to amplify that option, sometimes replacing the back fence or the neighborhood playground as the quickest and best place to find real-life advice. Mothers scattered across the globe can log in to these sites, freely sharing thoughts and fears about any motherhood-related topic imaginable.
The 24/7 availability of networking sites fits well into the frenzied schedule of new mothers, and many find comfort in the odd blend of intimacy and anonymity the Internet provides.
"There's so much competition in the mommy community," says Rosie Amodio, executive editor of TheNestBaby.com, a networking site that launched in May. "You have all these questions, and you don't always feel comfortable asking your friends. You're not going to come out and say, 'Is my child the only one who hits people?' So you find this community that provides you with support, but there's also some anonymity."
Networking sites for mothers aren't new. Clubmom.com was founded in 1999 (by "Today" co-host Meredith Vieira, among others) and parenting conversation has been a central part of iVillage.com since its launch in 1995. In March, iVillage added a new platform called Connect, where mothers form conversation groups to discuss anything from coping with pregnancy to serving dinners that teenagers will actually appreciate.
As online communities subtly elevate regular moms to the rank of expert, publishing houses appear to be picking up on the trend. Several new parenting-related books hitting stores this spring are written not by child psychologists, but by women whose only qualification is their personal experience as mothers.
Here are just a few of the newest sources of mommy wisdom:
TheNestBaby.com (launched in May)
Mission: Helping new moms tackle motherhood. "You have questions, you want answers. You don't have time to weed through tons of information," says executive editor Rosie Amodio.
New moms will find more advice and shopping ideas here than they'll probably ever need, all packaged with the stylish design of TheKnot.com and TheNest.com, out of which NestBaby grew. It focuses on pregnancy and the first year of babyhood, with chat topics ranging from the simple ("Where can I find a hat for my baby?") to the serious ("My baby is sick and refuses to take his medicine"). The site also links to LilaGuide.com, which offers product reviews done by moms.
Cost: free to join
momspace.com (launched in March)
Mission: Helping moms buy things. "MomSpace was created to help you, the CEO of your household," announces the home page.
Although it includes a bit of personal networking and chat, this site mainly connects women with businesses in their geographic area that have been rated by other local moms. "It's formalizing the bus stop talk," says Colleen Devine, publicist for the site, "but it's not just for the new mom. It's used by moms with teenagers and even empty-nesters."
Cost: free to join, and moms can earn money by requesting a part-time job selling advertising space on the site to local businesses in their area.
momjunction.com (launched in November)
Mission: Helping moms talk with each other. "Tap into the wisdom of moms everywhere" says the home page slogan, which is accompanied by slide show of a variety of moms young and old, corporate and stay-at-home. The page conveys an accessible, all-inclusive vibe, suggesting a chatting-over-coffee sort of friendliness. But moms posting here still keep their anonymity intact most employ ambiguous usernames and offer little or no personal information in their profiles. You can create your own group on this site or join an existing one, which are easily found using a basic search tool.
Cost: free to join.
"What the Other Mothers Know" by Michele Gendelman, Ilene Graff and Donna Rosenstein (released in April)
Mission: This new book's lengthy subtitle says it all: "A Practical Guide to Child Rearing Told in a Really Nice, Funny Way That Won't Make You Feel Like a Complete Idiot the Way All Those Other Parenting Books Do."
The writing is breezy, and at times funny, and is supplemented by useful bullet-point lists and comments from a variety of moms. It's main selling point is the underground know-how that veteran moms spend years developing ("There's one person even more powerful than the principal: the school secretary").
Cost: Harper Paperbacks, $12.95
"I Was a Really Good Mom Before I Had Kids" by Trisha Ashworth and Amy Nobile (published in April)
Mission: An advertising and a public relations executive interviewed dozens of mothers to find out why women who should feel so happy about their lives instead focus on the negative and only put pressure on themselves to do more. Helpful checklists throughout the book make a great reality check for mothers who are always worried they aren't doing things right. Amusing "Dirty Little Secrets" will make moms say, "Hey, it's not just me!"
Cost: Chronicle Books, $18.95
"The Milk Memos: How Real Moms Learned to Mix Business with Babies - and How You Can, Too" by Cate Colburn-Smith and Andrea Serrette (published in March)
Mission: Developed from notebooks shared by women using IBM's employee lactation room, this collection of advice focuses on the challenges of working mothers. It's a mix of basic instruction and beautifully unguarded prose written by women who ache to be with their children and yet need or want to be working outside the home.
It doesn't offer the interactivity of a Web site, of course, but the confessional structure of this book leaves you feeling somewhat connected to this articulate community of moms.
Cost: Tarcher, $13.95
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Monday, July 2, 2007
By MELISSA RAYWORTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Though every generation has its own parenting experts, one has always remained constant in the eyes of mothers: another mother.
The Internet has only served to amplify that option, sometimes replacing the back fence or the neighborhood playground as the quickest and best place to find real-life advice. Mothers scattered across the globe can log in to these sites, freely sharing thoughts and fears about any motherhood-related topic imaginable.
The 24/7 availability of networking sites fits well into the frenzied schedule of new mothers, and many find comfort in the odd blend of intimacy and anonymity the Internet provides.
"There's so much competition in the mommy community," says Rosie Amodio, executive editor of TheNestBaby.com, a networking site that launched in May. "You have all these questions, and you don't always feel comfortable asking your friends. You're not going to come out and say, 'Is my child the only one who hits people?' So you find this community that provides you with support, but there's also some anonymity."
Networking sites for mothers aren't new. Clubmom.com was founded in 1999 (by "Today" co-host Meredith Vieira, among others) and parenting conversation has been a central part of iVillage.com since its launch in 1995. In March, iVillage added a new platform called Connect, where mothers form conversation groups to discuss anything from coping with pregnancy to serving dinners that teenagers will actually appreciate.
As online communities subtly elevate regular moms to the rank of expert, publishing houses appear to be picking up on the trend. Several new parenting-related books hitting stores this spring are written not by child psychologists, but by women whose only qualification is their personal experience as mothers.
Here are just a few of the newest sources of mommy wisdom:
TheNestBaby.com (launched in May)
Mission: Helping new moms tackle motherhood. "You have questions, you want answers. You don't have time to weed through tons of information," says executive editor Rosie Amodio.
New moms will find more advice and shopping ideas here than they'll probably ever need, all packaged with the stylish design of TheKnot.com and TheNest.com, out of which NestBaby grew. It focuses on pregnancy and the first year of babyhood, with chat topics ranging from the simple ("Where can I find a hat for my baby?") to the serious ("My baby is sick and refuses to take his medicine"). The site also links to LilaGuide.com, which offers product reviews done by moms.
Cost: free to join
momspace.com (launched in March)
Mission: Helping moms buy things. "MomSpace was created to help you, the CEO of your household," announces the home page.
Although it includes a bit of personal networking and chat, this site mainly connects women with businesses in their geographic area that have been rated by other local moms. "It's formalizing the bus stop talk," says Colleen Devine, publicist for the site, "but it's not just for the new mom. It's used by moms with teenagers and even empty-nesters."
Cost: free to join, and moms can earn money by requesting a part-time job selling advertising space on the site to local businesses in their area.
momjunction.com (launched in November)
Mission: Helping moms talk with each other. "Tap into the wisdom of moms everywhere" says the home page slogan, which is accompanied by slide show of a variety of moms young and old, corporate and stay-at-home. The page conveys an accessible, all-inclusive vibe, suggesting a chatting-over-coffee sort of friendliness. But moms posting here still keep their anonymity intact most employ ambiguous usernames and offer little or no personal information in their profiles. You can create your own group on this site or join an existing one, which are easily found using a basic search tool.
Cost: free to join.
"What the Other Mothers Know" by Michele Gendelman, Ilene Graff and Donna Rosenstein (released in April)
Mission: This new book's lengthy subtitle says it all: "A Practical Guide to Child Rearing Told in a Really Nice, Funny Way That Won't Make You Feel Like a Complete Idiot the Way All Those Other Parenting Books Do."
The writing is breezy, and at times funny, and is supplemented by useful bullet-point lists and comments from a variety of moms. It's main selling point is the underground know-how that veteran moms spend years developing ("There's one person even more powerful than the principal: the school secretary").
Cost: Harper Paperbacks, $12.95
"I Was a Really Good Mom Before I Had Kids" by Trisha Ashworth and Amy Nobile (published in April)
Mission: An advertising and a public relations executive interviewed dozens of mothers to find out why women who should feel so happy about their lives instead focus on the negative and only put pressure on themselves to do more. Helpful checklists throughout the book make a great reality check for mothers who are always worried they aren't doing things right. Amusing "Dirty Little Secrets" will make moms say, "Hey, it's not just me!"
Cost: Chronicle Books, $18.95
"The Milk Memos: How Real Moms Learned to Mix Business with Babies - and How You Can, Too" by Cate Colburn-Smith and Andrea Serrette (published in March)
Mission: Developed from notebooks shared by women using IBM's employee lactation room, this collection of advice focuses on the challenges of working mothers. It's a mix of basic instruction and beautifully unguarded prose written by women who ache to be with their children and yet need or want to be working outside the home.
It doesn't offer the interactivity of a Web site, of course, but the confessional structure of this book leaves you feeling somewhat connected to this articulate community of moms.
Cost: Tarcher, $13.95
Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Monday, July 2, 2007
young and old, corporate and stay-at-home. The page conveys an accessible, all-inclusive vibe, suggesting a...
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