Looking back at some of our favorite TODAY Parents stories of the year.
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From the heartwarming to the hilarious, from the need-to-know information to keep your kids safe to the funny everyday parenting moments, our TODAY Parents team covered it all in 2022. We are celebrating the stories you loved most in our Parents section this year, from a dad's secret trick to a getting a good family photo to the card a girl gave her preschool teacher that could only make her mother laugh in exasperation. |
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A 'tired' mom created a funny first day of school sign —for herself. |
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It's not just the kids who mark the first day of school with a chalkboard-style sign. Jeni Bukolt of Waxhaw, North Carolina, put a funny spin on the tradition with a board of her own that read, "I am 42 years tired. I'll probably miss a school 'theme' day. I really like sleep. Please don't ask me to volunteer. But I will buy you supplies." While her board was filled with one-liners, the mom of two was really just trying to get a simple message across to other parents during a stressful time. "Parents put so much pressure on themselves to live up to a certain standard on social media," she told us. "No one has a perfect life and we don't have to judge each other." |
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In the moment, it can seem like the parenting equivalent of climbing Mount Everest: getting your kids to smile for pictures. One dad has cracked the code, as he demonstrated with side-by-side photos of his 5-year-old son with a pained grimace and a sweet smile. "My son when I tell him to smile vs when I yell out 'poop!'" dad Adam Perry wrote on Twitter. Perry and his wife know that humor is the only way they can get that great smile out of their little boy. They've also learned it's a universal tactic after hearing from others. "They're like, I tried it and it worked!'" Perry told us. "Also, it doesn't just work with kids. Adults are doing it too to make each other laugh in pictures." |
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It's the thought that counts! Preschooler Ruby Williams wanted to create a nice card for her teacher, and it resulted in her mom, Brinn, getting a puzzled text message from the school. Ruby can't read, so she accidentally grabbed some meant-for-adults cards from her mother's desk that read "A best friend you can have sex with" on the outside with "How great is that?" on the inside. Luckily it got a laugh from the director of the school. "I see these things happen to other parents and I'm like 'Yeah, that doesn't really happen.'" Brinn told us. "And now I'm like 'Well, yep it does, because I'm seeing it firsthand right now.'" |
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Thanks for letting us in your inbox this year! See you again tomorrow morning. Written by Scott Stump | Edited by Philip Caulfield Want to refer a friend? They can subscribe here. |
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