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Q: I've got three kids. The middle one, who's five, starts chattering the second she wakes up and doesn't close her mouth until she's asleep. On one hand, I love to hear her talk and have conversations about “Why this?” and “Why that?” But she's exhausting me and I feel like my other children aren't getting the attention they need because the 5-year-old is constantly interrupting. What can I do? A: When babies are born, we look forward to all of their "firsts." First smile, first laugh, first steps, first words. Especially with our first baby, these are milestones that make us giddy with anticipation and cause us to break out the camcorder at every turn. Then they start rolling . and walking . and talking - and we wonder, "What was I thinking??" Infants get going rolling, then crawling and we are amazed at how quickly they get good at it and soon are getting from point A to point B in little more than a blink of an eye. Toddlers start walking sometimes just as an aside to running and seemingly thrill at their new found ability to run in the "wrong" direction every time. But we understand that though these may try our patience and challenge our creative problem solving skills at times that, "This too shall pass". Talking is a whole different ball game. Or is it? We wait so patiently for their first coherent words, regale friends and co-workers with tales of our baby's babblings, pride ourselves in how well and early she's speaking in full sentences. And then it starts - the flip switches on and there's no off button in sight. And yes it can be exhausting. But there's good news! Young children learn at lightening speed with every sense available to them. This is such a good language learning time for them that adding a second language is a possibility. And reading to themselves is close at hand. All good things. So how to embrace the chatter of this age group without losing your cool? And how do you ensure that the other members of the family get a word in edgewise meanwhile? Here are some ideas:
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