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Warrior-Mentor
04-10-2007, 19:39
Check out:
www.flatdaddies.com
www.daddydolls.com

Honolulu Advertiser
April 9, 2007

Kids Have 'Daddy' Near And Dear During Deployment
By John Milburn, Associated Press

FORT RILEY, Kan. — For 2-year-old Anna Pribyla, it can be difficult to understand what it means for her dad to be in Iraq.

Every soldier looks like him. Even the neighbor's car looks like her father's.
But like thousands of other military children, Anna has something to cling to. She has her Daddy Doll, a small pillow, shaped like a person, with a digital picture of her dad, Capt. Eric Pribyla, printed on the front.

"She gets to sleep with him at night and still kiss him good night," said mom Chrissy Pribyla. "He goes everywhere with her because it keeps him fresh in her mind."

As the four-year Iraq war drags on, more families are keeping memories alive with the dolls or life-size posters called a Flat Daddy or Flat Mommy.

Michelle Kelley, a psychology professor at Old Dominion University, said dolls and posters aren't a panacea for missing a parent, but they could be a good test for how children are coping.

"If the caregiver sees that they are clutching and being weepy, it might be a good indication that they have emotions they can't explain or aren't feeling well about deployment," Kelley said.

And the worst scenario is they end up the bottom of a toy box.
"Each kid's different. Some kids might be into dolls and might be interested in it," Kelley said. "The big picture is to continue doing everything you were going to do. Keep the routine going."

Daddy Dolls started when Tricia Dyal asked a relative to make a doll for her children. Her husband, Marine Maj. Justin Dyal, was heading to Iraq for the second time in less than two years with a 4-year-old and newborn at home.

"My husband just deployed; the kids got sick and were hospitalized. I contacted my great-aunt and said, 'A picture's just not doing it. They need more,"' said Dyal, who lives near Camp Lejeune, N.C.

What she got was a doll with the picture of their father, something her children could clutch when they didn't feel well, something that would remind them of their dad.

"Our doll has been to doctor's visits. The first day of school it was in the backpack," she said. "It was for the kids. It fills in for the daddy or the parent deployed."

Dyal provides the pillows — several thousand so far — at a little more than the cost of supplies, $25 for a 17-inch doll or $19 for a 12-inch doll for smaller kids.

Flat Daddies were created by Sgt. 1st Class Barbara Claudel of the Maine National Guard to help families stay connected during deployments to Iraq. Seven months ago, SFC Graphics, a firm in Toledo, Ohio, got involved, taking on the job of printing the posters and getting them to families at little or no cost.

"When we heard the story, we said it was a nice fit for what we do every day," said Eric Crockett, national program director for SFC Flat Daddy. "She wanted to keep it in the original intent and free to families."

More information is available at www.flatdaddies.com and www.daddydolls.com.

Kraut783
04-10-2007, 19:44
That's not a bad idea. Think I will look into one for my daughter, I'm MOB in Sept for OIF. Thanks for sharing.

Gypsy
04-10-2007, 20:19
I first saw the "Flat Daddy" on a tv show last year, thought it was pretty cool. The pillow idea is equally great especially for younger kids.

82ndtrooper
04-10-2007, 20:21
There was some lady on 20/20 or 60 Minutes that had a life size male doll dressed in Navy Whites with a mustache that resembled her husbund and she carried it to lunch and dinner out with her.

I'll find it some where and post it here.

Russell S
04-10-2007, 20:24
I am due to deploy in the late summer, early fall. I am going to get some of these things for my little ones and not so little ones.

Thanks for the heads up on this one, W-M.

Warrior-Mentor
04-10-2007, 20:41
No problem. Try to help share the cool tips I find along the way. No need to keep a good thing like this a secret.

I hope the Moms behind www.daddydolls.com do well for themselves...they deserve it.

BTW snoop around their site...they got a bunch of "breaking deployment blues" tips for families and links to other supportive sites as well...

booker
04-11-2007, 06:48
To add to this, I just heard a story on the radio of an solider who is getting ready to deploy (one of the NG units that are in the news). He has a 3 month old baby, and he and his wife filmed somewhere in the neighborhood of 15 hours of home video of him reading childrens books. That way the child will have some "daddy time" even though dad is in Iraq. A unique idea (to me anyway). Don't know how well it would work for older kids.

RTK
04-11-2007, 07:42
To add to this, I just heard a story on the radio of an solider who is getting ready to deploy (one of the NG units that are in the news). He has a 3 month old baby, and he and his wife filmed somewhere in the neighborhood of 15 hours of home video of him reading childrens books. That way the child will have some "daddy time" even though dad is in Iraq. A unique idea (to me anyway). Don't know how well it would work for older kids.


I taped reading stories for my daughter both times I went. It's a good method and pretty easy to do. Plus, it keeps your voice in their head.

Another good thing is the "Build-a-bear (http://www.buildabear.com/)" where they'll take a short recording of you and input the device into the bear so when the child squeezes it, it plays back whatever you recorded.

sg1987
04-11-2007, 12:23
Booker, RTK, and others here who are serving,
I read these posts of you guys taping yourselves reading for your kids and it really put a lump in my throat. A heartfelt THANK YOU to you gentlemen and to all of you who deploy into harms way for us all! Thanks for your service and sacrifice! May the good Lord keep you and bless you and your families!

Warrior-Mentor
04-11-2007, 19:58
Free video for the children of deployong service members.
Elmo DVD is ideal for kids 3-5 years old...

Parents say Sesame program helps them, too
By Karen Jowers - Staff writer
Posted : Thursday Apr 5, 2007

Researchers have found even more reasons to love Elmo. His positive impact has reached far beyond preschool children in military families with the http://www.sesameworkshop.org/tlc "Talk, Listen, Connect" kit launched last summer, according to the results of a survey.

While the kit is aimed at military children of deployed parents, interviews with 367 spouses of active-duty, National Guard and reserve members in all branches of service showed that the stay-behind parents who used the kit also reported that their feelings of hopelessness and depression declined, according to Russell Research, Inc.

The parents also reported fewer negative behaviors in their preschool children, researchers said in a discussion of the findings April 3 in Washington.

These benefits were “far beyond what we expected,” said Jeanette Betancourt, vice president of outreach and educational practices for Sesame Workshop.

The results showed that “not only were we reaching the parents and younger children, but the entire family,” she said.

The survey results showed that nearly 80 percent of parents thought the materials had made them more comfortable in helping their child cope with deployment, and 80 percent of parents reported their children are better able to handle future deployments as a result of using the kit.

Army wife Joanna Lopez, of Fort Bragg, N.C., said she and her children are better prepared for the third deployment of her husband Ernesto after using the kit. “My first two deployments, I did not know what to expect for my kids, and what my kids would ask,” Lopez said.

“Listening to some kids, and what they are asking, and what my kids are going to ask, I know what to answer now, and I know how to prepare them. I’m more prepared for before, during and after the deployment,” said Lopez, who is the mother of three children, ages, 10, 6 and 4 months.

The families surveyed have at least one preschool child, and one parent in paygrades E-2 to E-6 experiencing some stage of deployment. About one-fourth were Hispanic families; Sesame Workshop also produced a Spanish version of the kit, which includes a DVD featuring Sesame Street’s Elmo and his dad discussing and dealing with a deployment.

That DVD was the key component of the kit, which also featured activities for parents to use to help their children cope with deployment. About three-fourths of the parents reported that their child watched the video more than once; 85 percent said they watched it with their child. It also sparked discussions. About two-thirds of parents said they spoke to their children after watching the DVD, mostly about deployment.

More than 225,000 kits have been provided to military families since the program was launched in August. Sesame Workshop is now exploring additional ways to help military families, including families of soldiers returning with injuries, said Gary Knell, president and chief executive officer of Sesame Workshop.

“Talk, Listen, Connect” is also available at:

http://www.militaryonesource.com/skins/MOS/home.aspx

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. provided funding for the project.

The research on “Talk, Listen, Connect” was designed in consultation the http://www.cfs.purdue.edu/mfri "Military Family Research Institute at Purdue University, and was conducted by http://www.russellresearch.com Russell Research. The spouses were interviewed before they used the kits, and four weeks after they received the kits.