PARENT TO PARENT: Hipseat from Hippychick Review

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The problem: The school run. Sound familiar?

We’ve all been there. Watched our children finally gain the confidence to take those first steps, beg to walk to the local shop with you, then get bored and insist you carry them home.

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Image Source: Davee Blu Photography

I walk Dexter to nursery everyday (I can’t complain as the school run is literally under five minutes). Dex is super capable and responsible on the roads and will often take his balance bike or scooter, yet Heidi (at 2 years old) is an absolute nightmare. The walk there tends to go to plan (unless she sees a cat and decides to chase it), but the walk home takes anywhere from 15-30 minutes where she’s in a strop that her brother has left her to go and play with his friends.

90% of the time I’ll find myself having to drag / carry / bundle her home any which way I can. There are screams, sit-on-the-pavement protests and tantrums. Oh so many tantrums.

The thing is Heidi loves to be carried, but she’s so heavy I can’t manage it the entire way home. Not only is it uncomfortable for her, and she’ll arch her back and make like I’ve kidnapped her, my back simply can’t take the strain.

The solution: The Hipseat from Hippychick

I’ve tried slings and child carriers plenty of times with Heidi, but am yet to find one to really suit me. I hate being swathed in fabric on a sweaty day, and big bulky backpack-style carriers aren’t exactly convenient for a quick school run.

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Thankfully, once again, the guys at Hippychick have smashed it and brought about a solution to this age-old problem. Their Hipseat is a lightweight and portable solution for carrying children aged 6 months-3 years.

What is it?

Put simply, it’s a fully adjustable band (42 inches maximum, extensions available for sizes 20+) that sits atop your hips. On one side there’s a padded seat with a non-slip pad for your child to perch on. It can take the weight of heavy 3-year-olds, and is designed specifically to load-bear so your child’s weight is distributed more evenly. If there’s any doubt, the Hipseat is endorsed and recommended by osteopaths, chiropractors, physiotherapists and health centres, and has won tons of awards to boot.

Specifically designed to address one of the root causes of adult back pain, the hipseat supports {a child’s] increasingly heavy weight from underneath. Instead of twisting the spine, the parent’s back stays straight and the child is tucked into the chest, providing comfort and security for both adult and child.

How did we get on?

I LOVE it! I had worried it would be bulky to haul around, but it comes in a cute little drawstring dust bag and the lightweight seat is actually removable too. This means you can simply detach the seat and pop it under your pushchair when your tot decides to go for a stroll.

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Not only this, but it’s sooo easy to use - unlike slings, you won’t need to watch dozens of YouTube videos to get it right. You just secure it around your waist, swivel the seat into position, place your child on the seat with their legs astride if facing in, or bottom firmly on seat if facing out. The flexibility to allow your child to sit however they are most comfortable is really handy. Obviously you’ll have one arm around your child at all times, but the other is completely free to hold another child’s hand, or your handbag.

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My back problems are notably improved. I’ve managed a yoga DVD every night with none of the pain or stiffness I usually get after a long day with Heidi.

The Hipseat is also fully machine washable in case of leaky nappies or long sweaty walks, and I’ve been really impressed by its durability. There’s no puckering or twisting inside the band so it’s retained its shape superbly. It’s also surprisingly comfy to wear allowing me to walk considerably longer with Heidi. My Fitbit is testament to this, and I’ve been regularly managing those all-important 10,000 steps a day.

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I picked a neutral purple shade, but there’s 7 different colourways in total. Most of the colours are priced at £39.95 with free standard delivery, however the ditsy Liberty print and coffee coloured seat are currently on sale at £25.00. If you compare this to slings, that’s some 50% below the average RRP (even more so for the hipseats priced at £25.00). For something that works so perfectly and allows you better freedom of movement with your child, it’s a no-brainer.

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Buy yours direct from Hippychick

Find out more

Web: www.hippychick.com / FB: @Hippychick / Twitter: @hippychick_com YouTube: @HippychickLtd


So I’m raising a genius…

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My son.

He’s three years-old and still can’t say his own name. In fact, he can say “Mummy”, “Daddy” and, wait for it, “Sweets” - and that’s about it. He is vaguely potty-trained. That’s to say, he’ll do it when he wants and he regularly mistakes cotton pants for a nappy.

Let’s get this right though - I’m not bashing him. This kid is capable of acts of total (bordering on criminal) ingenuity:

HE’S THE KING OF YOUTUBE

This started as a way of keeping him calm on car journeys. We’d give him our Google Nexus or iPhone with NOW TV, Netflix and Flixster apps so he can stream kids movies, or those we’ve downloaded for him. Annoyingly however, he mostly plumps for toy unboxing vids (in Russian, Chinese and more) on YouTube. If not this, it’s vids of grown men in Lycra clad Spider-Man costumes hoovering or washing dishes.

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What’s impressive is not what he watches, but how he finds them. I can ask him to find a road safety video from the 1970s and he’ll disappear into the corner to figure it out. He obviously can’t spell so how does he manage to find it?! I truly am raising a genius.

HE’S FLUENT IN KOREAN

At least we think its Korean. Maybe it’s Punjabi… Or it could be Swahili? Whatever it is, he’s completely fluent and is flat-out frustrated that we can’t understand him. He’ll shout it at you and over-pronounce much like a foreign waiter and his dad and I are regularly left open-mouthed saying “Whaaaaaat?”… maybe it’s all those YouTube vids.

HE CAN SCALE A STAIR GATE

The naughty step is lost on Dexter and no bars can contain this criminal mastermind. If he’s on a time-out in his room, you can almost hear his brain working overtime as he formulates an escape plan. Even if you remove his table and chairs and other lightweight furniture, he’ll find a way of creating a step high enough for him to fling his leg over the stair gate. Clothes, duvets and even his baby sister have all been used to this end.

HE CAN OUTWIT SLEEP

Most kids have surprised us by fighting sleep and trying our patience at bedtimes, but Dexter’s skills are even more impressive. This kid has actually set his body clock to wake at 1.05am every night. He’ll then grab his Spider-Man pillow and creep silently into our room. Every morning we wake up to a slumbering tot beside us and wonder when and how he got there. The Sleepbot app on our iPhones have since given up his secrets.

HE’S A SELFIE EXTRAORDINAIRE

Nuff said.

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HE PARENTS HIS SISTER

I don’t need any help parenting Heidi. She’s pretty simple to look after and needs only a unending procession of fruit and milk to keep her in line. She’s a positively angelic baby and a simple “No, not that / there” will see her come tottering back to you from breakables, plugs or cupboards on Bambi legs. She’ll head straight back to mummy to hear the rationale behind it and appears to take it all in.

So I don’t need any help parenting Heidi, but I regularly get it in the form of Dexter. She doesn’t even have to do anything wrong to earn a clip round the ear, or quick drag across the carpet. Her biggest crimes seem to be pinching chicken nuggets from his plate, wanting a cuddle with Mummy when Dexter fancies one himself or having the audacity to want to play with her own toys.

HE CAN FAKE A HEADACHE

You see, I thought this was a real skill that most women perfect after a few years of marriage to ward off their husband’s advances. I’m pretty good at this myself. You squint your eyes a little and grab at your hairline where it borders your forehead. Toss in a couple of well-timed sighs and your other half is sending you to bed with a glass of water and two Nurofen. I use this regularly to get out of sex, bathing the kids or doing the washing up.

Although Dexter’s motivations are different (his are to convince Mummy & Daddy to let him fall asleep on the sofa rather than his bed, to dodge vegetables at dinner, or to get carried home from the corner shop) he can have you believing he has a brain tumor in seconds. He deserves an BAFTA for his efforts.

 

There you have it. These are just 7 of Dexter’s extraordinary talents - there are so many more. I know most of us think we have mini geniuses at home, but I truly believe I’m raising the next Mark Zuckerberg.

 


The Reality of Having Two Babies

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Having two babies is bloody harder than I’d ever envisaged, and today has been possibly the toughest one yet. In fact, thinking about it, all Monday’s are pretty dire. I’m still in blissful weekend mode where I wake up beside the man who helped me create my little miracles, and the man who bears most all responsibility for them at the weekends. It’s a bit of a shock-to-the-system when you hear Dexter screaming what I can only assume are toddler profanities and rattling his stair-gate like Lecter’s neighbour in Silence of the Lambs. Then there’s my beautiful newly birthed cherub in an odoriferous morning nappy laying beside me - eying up my breasts like an alcoholic who’s spotted out-of-date cast offs in ASDA’s grundon. At that very moment, you know you’re in for a crap day.

Yep, parenting two kids is tough. The midwife might as well have handed me twenty babies when she slipped my Heidi to me. All the sense of occasion was pretty much destroyed when she then whisked her away as “she’s gotta lot of poo on her, bless her… sit tight, I’ll just wipe the worst of it off”.

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Even before Heidi and I were discharged, I was finding it hard work. Whipping out boobs on-demand and dealing with 3am hysteria came hurtling back like a bad dream.

And Heidi wasn’t as ‘pretty’ as I thought she would be. I remember seeing right past all the baggy and peeling skin with Dexter and thinking he was the most beautiful baby ever to be born. But Heidi looked like she’d strolled right out of a scene from the Labyrinth. Don’t get me wrong, my daughter is gorgeous (…now she’s had a few weeks to grow into herself) - but there’s definitely an altogether different appreciation of #2,3,4 babies that most of us aren’t expecting.

Fair enough, there are ways to ‘cheat’ your way through the week - like leaving the kids in PJ’s throughout the day so they look bed-ready when daddy comes through the door, or fast-forwarding the evenings so it’s acceptable to grab a glass of wine at bang on five-o-clock. But it doesn’t work as a long-term solution and all too quickly you’re rocking back and forth in the garden (behind the Little Tykes monstrosity that you thought was such a good idea until you realised your kid believes it’s an actual house he can actually sleep in) clutching a packet of cigarettes and telling yourself you won’t start again ‘properly’, just have one or two when the stress gets too much.

Then there’s the guilt.

You can see your toddler isn’t quite as thrilled as you thought he’d be so you start forgiving the odd misdemeanor as he’s obviously “acting out”. But when you give that precious inch, that toddler will sprint out of your grasp like that fella out of the Virgin ads. All of a sudden you start believing your two-year-old is capable of deception more masterful than the kid from Problem Child. I’ve definitely lost Dexter to the dark-side and he’s now fully aware that the way to rouse mummy from the sofa when she’s breastfeeding is to pull out a wire from the back of the telly, rip out her plants, or take his nappy off and pee on the floor. If mummy is waning and is looking beaten, he’ll move it up a notch and swallow lego, coins or anything else that will have us all bundled into an ambulance.

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Toss in the fact that I’m still pretending to be Super-Mum and am still trying to find a few spare minutes in the evening to tick off reviews that are outstanding from 6 months ago, and it’s quickly apparent why a vein is bulging in my neck like Stressed Eric. It’s no wonder I’ve been hospitalised twice with a suspected blood clot that has turned out to be nothing more than severe acid reflux and panic attacks.

So yes, I’m back on anti-depressants and waiting patiently for them to kick in. I’m also now frantically ringing nurseries and waxing lyrical about my beautiful first-born in an attempt to disguise the fact he’s now so awful to me that I just can’t cope. Every time a nursery worker scoffs that “some ladies pop them on the waiting list at birth” I kick myself for not being so flippin organised.

And there, ladies and gentlemen, is the reality of having two babies. It’s terrifying, emotional, stressful, awful and very likely to get me sectioned. As much as I love my babies, I really really do, I cannot wait for them to morph into proper little people - toilet-trained, capable of asking me where babies come from, and no longer receiving draught milk but necking it out of the bottle and then sneaking it back into the fridge… Only then might I rediscover my sanity… and start begging Craig for another.

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