Dads Bedtime Tales 15 Pdf
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Hannah's dad has an important job--he's in the military. When her dad has to go away, Hannah is very sad. She and her mom gather things to send to her dad. What Hannah misses most are her dad's bedtime hugs. How will she find a way to send some hugs to her dad
Although Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm credited \"various tales from Hesse\" (the region where they lived) as their source, scholars have argued that the brothers heard the story in 1809 from the family of Wilhelm's friend and future wife, Dortchen Wild, and partly from other sources.[9] A handwritten note in the Grimms' personal copy of the first edition reveals that in 1813 Wild contributed to the children's verse answer to the witch, \"The wind, the wind,/ The heavenly child,\" which rhymes in German: \"Der Wind, der Wind,/ Das himmlische Kind.\"[2]
Folklorists Iona and Peter Opie indicate that \"Hansel and Gretel\" belongs to a group of European tales especially popular in the Baltic regions, about children outwitting ogres into whose hands they have involuntarily fallen.[7]
In the Russian Vasilisa the Beautiful, the stepmother likewise sends her hated stepdaughter into the forest to borrow a light from her sister, who turns out to be Baba Yaga, a cannibalistic witch. Besides highlighting the endangerment of children (as well as their own cleverness), the tales have in common a preoccupation with eating and with hurting children: The mother or stepmother wants to avoid hunger, and the witch lures children to eat her house of candy so that she can then eat them.[17]
Structural comparisons can also be made with other tales of ATU 327 type (\"The Children and the Ogre\"), which is not a simple fairy tale type but rather a \"folktale complex with interconnected subdivisions\" depicting a child (or children) falling under the power of an ogre, then escaping by their clever tricks.[23]
In ATU 327B (\"The Brothers and the Ogre\"), a group of siblings come to an ogre's house who intends to kill them in their beds, but the youngest of the children exchanges the visitors with the ogre's offspring, and the villain kills his own children by mistake. They are chased by the ogre, but the siblings eventually manage to come back home safely.[24] Stith Thompson points the great similarity of the tales types ATU 327A and ATU 327B that \"it is quite impossible to disentangle the two tales\".[25]
Finally, ATU 327 tales share a similar structure with ATU 313 (\"Sweetheart Roland\", \"The Foundling\", \"Okerlo\") in that one or more protagonists (specifically children in ATU 327) come into the domain of a malevolent supernatural figure and escape from it.[24] Folklorist Joseph Jacobs, commenting on his reconstructed proto-form of the tale (Johnnie and Grizzle), noticed the \"contamination\" of the tale with the story of The Master Maid, later classified as ATU 313.[28] ATU 327A tales are also often combined with stories of ATU 450 (\"Little Brother and Sister\"), in which children run away from an abusive stepmother.[3]
Several writers have drawn inspiration from the tale, such as Robert Coover in \"The Gingerbread House\" (Pricks and Descants, 1970), Anne Sexton in Transformations (1971), Garrison Keillor in \"My Stepmother, Myself\" in \"Happy to Be Here\" (1982), and Emma Donoghue in \"A Tale of the Cottage\" (Kissing the Witch, 1997).[8] Adam Gidwitz's 2010 children's book A Tale Dark & Grimm and its sequels In a Glass Grimmly (2012), and The Grimm Conclusion (2013) are loosely based on the tale and show the siblings meeting characters from other fairy tales.Terry Pratchett mentions gingerbread cottages in several of his books, mainly where a witch had turned wicked and 'started to cackle', with the gingerbread house being a stage in a person's increasing levels of insanity. In The Light Fantastic the wizard Rincewind and Twoflower are led by a gnome into one such building after the death of the witch and warned to be careful of the doormat, as it is made of candy floss.
Reading to toddlers often (if possible, at least once a day) is a great goal. Choosing regular times to read (especially before naps and bedtime) helps kids learn to sit with a book and relax. But you can read anytime your child seems in the mood.
In our house, we mark the start of bedtime by going upstairs with the boys between 7-7:15 PM. They brush teeth and bathe every other night. When one or the other attempts a digression (Wrestling! Running around naked! Peeing on the floor!) we firmly redirect them to the task at hand. They get in their pajamas, read stories, sing songs, and go to sleep on their own. If one parent is doing both bedtimes, the older one helps put the younger one to bed. Lights out is by 8:30 PM for the older boy.
When I read The Power of Habit (affiliate link), I found some terrific insights into the importance of bedtime. Remember, the most powerful reinforcer of behavior by your child is positive reinforcement (kind words, contact, affection). This is WAY more effective than, say, sticker charts.
If you are reading this post, you and your child have likely fallen into some bad habits around bedtime (fighting, lying with them until falling asleep, eating a chicken dinner in bed, etc). By establishing a consistent time and pattern of bedtime, you are going to essentially revise these habits so that, with time, your child will actually crave their lovely and predictable bedtime.
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