A Girl Got a Camera for Her Birthday and Took a Picture of Her Dad Pooping

Not every hero wears a cape – sometimes they’re little girls with their first camera, sneaking into the bathroom to snap a picture of their dad on the pot.

And listen. Everyone with little kids knows that there’s a finite amount of time between when you give them a gift you think they’ll like and when they a) break said gift or b) use said gift in a manner you never could have dreamed up with your boring adult brain.

“My daughter got a camera for her birthday,” he wrote. “One of the first things she did was barge into the bathroom and take a pic of me taking a dump.”

My daughter got a camera for a birthday. One of the first things she did with it was to barge in the bathroom and take a pic of me taking a dump. from funny

His wife thought the whole thing was hilarious, and dad is taking it all in stride, figuring that maybe one day they’ll print out an album that contains all of her “early work.”

Other people are sharing similar stories of the photos they find on their phone (literally every parent can tell you stories about this!), like this person, who also found a lovely video of herself pooing.

Image Credit: Reddit

People who obviously don’t have kids are wondering why parents don’t just lock the doors!

Image Credit: Reddit

To which we say that a) having them bang on the door is not any more peaceful than being barged in on…

Image Credit: Reddit

And b) there’s no telling what sort of trouble they could get into, either in the house or by locking themselves in the bathroom.

Image Credit: Reddit

I think it’s nice to see these sorts of post really get traction – it just proves that people love to know that they’re not in this crazy, unexpected parenting gig together!

And you know, laughter is the best medicine and all of that. There’s literally no other healthy way to get through it.

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This Dad’s Solution To His Kids Fighting Over His Lap? This Awesome Triple Rocking Chair.

If you have more than one child (or one child and pets, or more than one pet) you likely know that problems arise when they realize you only have one lap – and someone else is already in it. My 17 month-old and my puppy regularly oust each other from that warm, cozy spot between my folded knees.

Reading a book is, of course, the time when laps are at a premium, and for one father, not being able to hold all three of his babies and tell them a story was too much – so he did something about it.

This was the first "outing" of my StoryTime Rocking Chair. It won first place at a Fredericksburg art exhibit. Rose, at…

Posted by Hal Russell Taylor on Friday, August 30, 2013

Hal Taylor is, in addition to being a father with three kiddos, a master craftsman. He loves reading to his kids, but after the third one – a daughter named Rose – was born, he realized he’d run out of lap (but not love).

He created a beautiful, one-of-a-kind (for now) masterpiece he calls the Storytime Rocking Chair. There are seats for at least 3 kids (I think you could do 4, with 2 on your lap).

Cherry StoryTime front view

Posted by Hal Russell Taylor on Friday, August 30, 2013

And if you’re thinking this is something you could make yourself, well…not if you’re as good with wood craftmanship as Hal is.

He told Bored Panda “there are over 200 precisely cut and shaped pieces of wood which I use to make up the 19 back braces. That is more pieces than you will find in 20 normal rocking chairs.”

Recently finished StoryTime

Posted by Hal Russell Taylor on Wednesday, March 19, 2014

The man-hours and materials are two reasons he’s selling his hand-crafted rocker for around $7,000 online.

If you’ve got the cash and a bunch of kids, I’d say it’s a piece that would be handed down for generations to come.

What do you think? Talk to us in the comments.

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When Dads Are Involved with Kids, Everyone Benefits With These ABCs

There’s  a lot of science out there regarding parenting and its effects – good, bad, or indifferent – on the kids. And while dads today are infinitely more involved in the day-to-day muck in the trenches, it’s fair to say that moms are still doing most of the nitty-gritty work.

A recent publication, though, shows that not only are kids better off with super involved dads, but the dads are better for it, too.

Image Credit: Pixabay

University of Delaware professor Rob Palkovitz has studied father-child relationships across cultures, developmental stages, and life transitions, and says the ABC of Fatherhood model best explains how involved fathers can benefit from positive and consistent engagement with their children.

The three-point plan for long-term relationships and personal success suggests that these emotional investments literally always pay off in time.

A is for Affective Climate

Image Credit: Pixabay

This means promoting a sense of love and constancy, making the child feel as though dad not only cares for him, but will have his back no matter the circumstances. Being secure in a father’s love has been found to be the basis for a positive identity, as well as the courage to explore and learn new things.

For dad, learning to do this well improves a man’s cognitive skills, health, and capacity for empathy while building confidence, self-esteem, emotional regulation and expression. In short, it helps dads learn to control their anger, face their fears, and express those tricky tender emotions.

B is for Behavior

Image Credit: Pixabay

Dad going to games, helping with homework, playing with them in the yard has a positive impact on a child’s academic achievement, ability to make friends, and their decisions surrounding drugs, alcohol, and sex.

Doing these sorts of things with their kids gives men permissions to play, to re-experience childhood, and even to work through some issues they might have with their own upbringing.

C is for Connection

Image Credit: Pixabay

This is about how sensitive a father is to his children, which leaves him free to make use of teachable moments. Dads who are good at this are excellent at reading their kids’ moods, which makes it easier to guess when to push, when to back off, or when to simply sit beside them in silence.

Tuning in this way to their children makes men more empathetic, not only to the kids, but at work and in his friendship and romantic relationships, as well.

Not only that, it develops dad’s capacity for evaluation, planning, and decision-making, which are all things adults do every day.

Tuning-in changes men. A close father-child relationship means that a father will typically be more empathetic to the outlook of children, a skill that he can then apply elsewhere, such as at work, better understanding the diverse perspectives of colleagues.

What all of this means is that these relationships are not just about the kids, but proves that fatherhood can play a central role in the development of male adults. As these relations grow over time they lead to change, and immature newlyweds and newborns blossom into great parents and functional adults guiding independent young people toward adulthood.

Remember that parenting is a marathon, not a sprint. Give yourself the space and time to stumble, fall back, and persevere until both you and your kid find the kind of solid footing that will hopefully be the foundation for not only a lifelong parent-child relationship, but a friendship as well.

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A Dad Wanted to Know If He’s Wrong for Putting His 9-Year-Old Daughter on a Diet

Yes. It’s fine (and great!) to teach children that food is fuel for our bodies and to guide them toward the choices that follow that mantra, but also…they’re kids, and you should also tell them that cake is delicious and it’s okay to enjoy those things in moderation.

And if your child is struggling to make good choices and is chubbier than his or her classmates?

Don’t. Say. Anything. About. Weight.

These are my personal feelings on the matter, but also, after reading through the responses to this Am I The A**hole post, the opinions of many women who wish they’d been raised in this manner.

AITA for putting my 9yo on a diet and ’emotionally damaging’ her? from AmItheAsshole

The post is from a dad whose 9-year-old daughter has “a belly,” so he decided to start cutting back her calories and taking her to the gym 4x a week.

Image Credit: Reddit

He thought she was fine with it (even though he admits she fussed about both changes), but when she broke down at a friends’ birthday party saying she couldn’t have candy or pizza or she’d get fat, her mother found out what had been going on.

Image Credit: Reddit

So, his 9yo basically has an eating disorder but he maintains that he only had her best interests at heart.

Image Credit: Reddit

The replies on Reddit, it should not surprise you to learn, were mostly telling this guy off for damaging his daughter’s self-esteem to the point that it could be decades before she can find her way back to a healthy relationship with diet and exercise.

Image Credit: Reddit

Another girl, another eating disorder, another man who thinks he has the right to make her feel like she doesn’t look “right” and needs to change to please him.

Excuse me while I go rage.

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A Guy Posted the Most “Dad” Solution Ever to Washing Baby Bottles

Men and women approach parenting differently. As a mom who can admittedly be a kind of a control freak, being okay with how my husband cares for the kids when I’m away – even though it doesn’t look at all like it does when I care for the kids – has been one of the hardest, but most necessary, lessons of parenting.

It helps when dads come up with “dad” ways of doing things that make you laugh – partly because you can’t believe they actually work, and partly because you never would have thought of it yourself.

And yeah, if there’s a hack for the endless and tedious task of washing baby bottles, let me hear it.

My husband and I have wanted to start a blog about our life journey with the triplets for a while. Since this video, many people have asked for us to create a designated Facebook page to be able to keep up with the triplet tribe. Below are our links to Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and our blog. This is just a start to many more adventures to come.Triple Made Simplehttps://instagram.com/triplemadesimple?r=nametaghttp://triplemadesimple.wixsite.com/mombloghttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1zI1Vi5jmRC8LtBpvpaRUQI come home from grocery shopping to this…

Posted by Christy Gammel Peterson on Thursday, January 2, 2020

The man who came up with the idea found himself with baby bottles to wash for not just one newborn, but three. And with triplets on hand, absolutely anything that saves time is worth a shot.

His wife posted a video of his genius dad hack for washing all of those bottles and people just loved it.

Their triplets were a month old when the video was posted, and if you too find yourself with more bottles than time, you might want to attach your scrub brush to the end of a power drill and let it do the work.

Image Credit: Facebook

Aerol Peterson’s wife Christy arrived home from grocery shopping to find him washing away with one hand and thought it was brilliant.

His response:

“Smarter not harder, bro.”

The sink was full of clean bottles, so clearly, he wasn’t wrong.

Image Credit: Facebook

Her impromptu video has been watched over 11 million times and shared 215 thousand times, so I can only imagine that there are hundreds of dads all over the country jumping at the chance to use their power tools in the kitchen.

I mean. Tell me I’m wrong.

In the comments.

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18 Pieces of Parenting Advice From a Dad

Parenting is tough, and even though there is plenty of advice that applies across the board, the truth is that being a dad and being a mom really are different gigs.

If you’re a new dad or a dad who’s having a rough day, week, or teenage years, well, sometimes you just need a word of advice from dads who have been there and survived.

Here are 18 bits of advice if you’re in that place right at this very moment.

18. A spoonful of sugar

“When kids are young, you can convince them anything is fun. So, while you can’t have them scrub the floor, you can have them do little stuff, like matching the Tupperware lids to the containers.

My three-year-old loved to do that. This one came from my mom, who told me she used to have us clean out the refrigerator every week. She told us it was a game, and we totally bought it.” 

—Isaac, 32, Minnesota

17. Be specific when you want their help

“Don’t just say, ‘Your room is messy!’ You have to be specific.

Tell your kids about the dirty clothes on the floor, the empty water bottles all over, and the unmade bed. Messy is such a subjective word. What’s messy to you might not be messy to your kids, your spouse, or anyone else. So you have to articulate exactly what is unacceptable, and why.

When I was a kid, I didn’t mind doing chores because my mom was so specific. I always knew exactly what had to be done. She said doing it that way helped keep her sane, too.”

Adam, 36, New York

16. Don’t accept disrespect

“My grandfather never, ever let us disrespect him. Even if we were just playing around.

When I asked him why, he asked me if I loved him. I told him I did, very much. He said, ‘If you disrespect someone you love, what will keep you from doing it to anyone else?’

He was a Marine, so he commanded respect. And he knew how important it was to being a good person.”

Jim, 42, New York

15. Embrace natural consequences

“It’s like the difference between telling your kids not to put their hands on a hot stove, and them learning how much it hurts by actually doing it.

My sister is a teacher — and a mother — and she told me this when my son started getting a little older. ‘Natural consequences’ are like breaking your hand if you punch a wall, or burning your mouth if you eat pizza right out of the oven. Obviously, you don’t encourage your kids to do stuff like that just for the sake of learning what hot pizza feels like.

It’s more of a ‘What did you think was going to happen?’ teachable moment.”

James, 37, New York

14. Discipline is about teaching, not punishing

“If you punish a child without teaching them a real lesson, you’ve done nothing to help them grow.

A friend of mine told me that when I became a dad. He had a son who was about 10, and he expressed the importance of making discipline and punishment into two separate things. Discipline is the act of exploring what someone did wrong, and punishment is the consequence for that action.

You can’t just ground a kid and expect him or her to grow.”

Chuck, 29, California

13. All or nothing can be okay

“Give your kids 100 percent of your attention, or none of it at all until you can. Kids know when they’re being ignored.

Even worse, though, they know when they’re being dismissed. So, if you’re able to ask them to wait while you take a phone call, or whatever, instead of half-assing a conversation with them, you’ll both be able to give it 100 percent. I was raised by my grandmother, so she was really old school about that sort of thing. Look each other in the eyes, and connect.

She told me that those conversations with us were some of her fondest memories, so I try to do that as much as I can with my kids.”

John, 37, Ohio

12. They remember the little things

“Some of the best memories I have of growing up were when my mom and dad used to come surprise me at school and take me out to lunch.

We’d go to Burger King for the onion rings, and then to Dairy Queen  for a cherry slush. It didn’t happen regularly, which is what made it so special. It was almost better than birthdays. When I asked why they did it, they told me they needed a break from their days, and they wanted to spend it with their favorite person.

That meant so much to me.”

Edward, 37, West Virginia

11. Be careful what kind of relationship you model in front of the kids.

My mother used to get so upset when she would be disciplining us and my dad would walk in and interrupt. She taught me that parents have to be a united front.

If you don’t agree with something your spouse is saying, that’s okay. But deal with it after he or she has set the rules with the kids. Of course, this doesn’t apply to anything harmful or dangerous toward your child. But a new parenting style, or discipline policy can be discussed in private. My parents told me that they made a point to never let us see them argue.

Instead, they’d tell us they had an argument, and then explain how they worked it out. It impressed the importance of communication on me at an early age.”

Charles, 35, California

10. Interested is interesting.

“I learned this from a movie, actually.

It basically means that the best way to make yourself interesting is to become interested in someone else. Listen to their story. Ask questions. Make them feel important. The best thing I’ve done as a parent is to become actively interested in my kids’ lives. And it’s genuine, too. I want to know what they like, what they don’t like, what they think is funny, what stresses them out…everything. The movie was Loser with that kid from American Pie.

Easily the most random pearl of wisdom I’ve ever collected.”

Chris, 37, Ohio

9. Let your kids struggle.

“It’s hard, but my dad said some of his favorite memories of me growing up involved watching me struggle and then succeed.

There were so many times, he said, where he wanted to jump in and help, but held back and let me figure something out on my own.

He said it was so difficult, but so, so rewarding.”

Jared, 34, California

8. Don’t sweat the small stuff.

“The real goal of parenting is to try and help your kid try and figure out who he or she is.

Learn who that is — who your kid is at his or her core, heart, and soul — and encourage the best version of that. The actual mechanics of parenting — bedtimes, cleaning your plate, etc. — really don’t have much to do with that. I asked my mom her strategies on stuff like that once.

She said, ‘I don’t fucking remember. I just wanted you to be happy, safe, and kind.’”

Ethan, 35, Connecticut

7. Teach healthy boundaries.

“I learned to share, but I also learned not to share.

When I was about 7 or 8, my dad told me that it was nice to share my toys, but it wasn’t necessary. That it would make other people happy, but that it was okay to protect my things. I try to preach that to my kids, too. They’re so naturally generous that I want to make sure they know that it’s okay to keep things for themselves. Especially things they’ve worked for, or earned.

It didn’t make me selfish, just better at creating healthy boundaries.”

Stephen, 37, Washington, D.C.

6. Pick your battles.

“This is another way of saying ‘pick your battles’. You just have to.

My wife taught me this one. It’s sort of her mantra, even beyond raising kids. You’re going to have stress in life. That’s obvious. Some stress is primary — your kid gets sick, you lose your job, and stuff like that. But other stress is usually secondary, and you don’t need to deal with it right away. Sometimes not at all.

If you can choose which situations you actually allow to stress you, you can do a much better job managing being a parent.”

Joel, 30, North Carolina

5. Always say I love you.

“Just don’t waste a single chance to tell your kids they love you. Even if it embarrasses them. And even if it’s a thousand times a day.

It’s terrifying and morbid to say, but you never know if you might be speaking to someone for the last time. You just never know. So, no matter what, no matter if we’re or angry, or exhausted from laughing, we always end every conversation with ‘I love you’.

It’s a tradition my mother and father taught me when I was a kid, and it’s a good one.”

Hayden, 36, Toronto

4. Don’t be afraid to ask for help.

“I was amazed at how willing a random, fellow dad was to help me deal with a diaper issue in a Target bathroom.

I was a new dad, and a friend of mine — also a dad — said that asking other dads for help is par for the course, within reason. This was completely out of reason. I mean, a dirty diaper? But the guy pitched in like it was his own kid. I was blown away and humbled. And I’ve paid it forward several times.

Luckily, no random dirty diapers, but I’m not shy about pitching in if I see another dad struggling to carry groceries, or something like that. We’re in this together, right?”

R.J., 26, Louisiana

3. No one can argue with a medical degree.

“This one works with intrusive in-laws and annoying friends.

Whatever opinions they have that don’t mesh with your parenting style can be instantly negated by saying, ‘Oh, well, the doctor told me to do it this way. So…’ They might push back, but you’ve got credibility on your side. Even though it’s made up.

Ya know who told me to do that? The doctor.”

Dylan, 34, Nevada

2. Let them know emotions are normal.

“As a kid, emotions are scary because they’re so unfamiliar. You know the basics — happy, sad, scared, etc.

But, when you start having more complex emotions, you really struggle to identify them. Being a parent, if you can use words like ‘confused’, ‘aggravated’, and ‘overwhelmed’ in front of your kids to describe your emotions, they’ll become better at doing it themselves.

I’m a parent, but I’m also a teacher, so I credit one of my college professors with that nugget. It’s absolutely true.”

Ian, 34, Arizona

1. Show affection, and not just to the kids.

“My mom and dad were very affectionate. And I remember it fondly.

I remember my dad sneaking kisses here and there, and my mom hugging my dad whenever she got the chance. Even when they weren’t at their best, it was clear that they were so in love. And that always made me feel safe as a kid. Like things would always be okay, thanks to the power of love.

I brought it up once, and my dad almost didn’t even realize he did it. He just said, ‘I love your mother so much. I’m not embarrassed to show it.’”

Marcus, 36, Texas

I’m not a dad, but I can tell you that good advice is precious and should be filed away for a rainy day.

What’s the best advice you’ve gotten from another dad? Share it with us in the comments!

The post 18 Pieces of Parenting Advice From a Dad appeared first on UberFacts.

A Dad’s Parody of a Billie Eilish Song Is an Incredible Dad Joke

If you don’t know whoBillie Eilish is, you’re probably old, not cool, or an inevitable combination of both.

Also, you definitely didn’t watch the 2020 Grammy Awards, because girlfriend cleaned up.

In response, a dad using the handle FunkyTurkey on Reddit decided to make his own parody of her goth-pop beat “Bad Guy” – titled “Dad Guy” – and to really lean into pretty much every Dad stereotype that there is.

The result is a long, hilariously awesome and dorky Dad Joke.

The video includes him mowing the lawn, wearing the same pair of sneakers every day, eating an entire bag of chips, plucking his nose hairs, and doing his best to get through a jog.

I made Billie Eilish’s "Bad Guy" into a 3 minute long musical dad joke. I present Dad Guy. from videos

Other dads on Reddit are completely here for the video and the jokes, but also for using it to make their own daughters roll their eyes.

That’s how you know a Dad Joke has reached its true audience, my friends.

One Reddit user commented,

“Very well done.

Shared it with my 12yo daughter.

She rolled her eyes.”

Said another,

“Shared it with my 14-year-old niece.

I got ‘that’s just really stupid’.

Another commenter replied,

“Yep, same with mine.

I told her I’m gonna set it up and have it bumpin’ when I pick her up from school.”

FunkyTurkey replied, excited that his video was having such an impact on young lives.

“Excellent.

The song is making them roll their eyes as intended.

The experiment was a complete success.”

The video currently has over 600,000 views and proves, once again, that embarrassment and teenage huffing doesn’t kill a Dad Joke – it only adds fuel to the fire that makes them live forever.

What do you think? Perfect dad joke? Let us know in the comments!

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