Children should come with warning labels, am I right mom and dad readers? As a parent, do you have times where you could use a good laugh about raising children? Have you ever wished that your children came with warning labels when they were born?
Do you remember those crazy and frustrating times that didn’t seem very funny at the time, but later on you discovered you could laugh about them?
Although children don’t come with an instruction manual for parents, kids should definitely come with warning labels, such as:
- Caution: Children Have No Warranty or Guarantee
- Caution: Motherhood Causes Identity Theft
- Caution: Teaching Children to Talk Will Backfire
- Caution: Children Cause Hearing Loss
- Caution: You are Not Smarter than a Fifth Grader
- Caution: Peace and Quiet Come with a Price
- Caution: Children are Not Cheaper by the Dozen
- Caution: GPS Locator Recommended
Patti McKenna’s new book, appropriately titled Caution: Children Should Come With Warning Labels, is a true and humorous personal story of raising children from birth through young adulthood.
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Empty nest syndrome refers to the feelings of sadness, grief, depression, loneliness, emptiness and loss when children grow up, leave for college, get married, or leave home to live on their own. “Empty-nesters” can either be mothers or fathers, but mothers are primarily the ones who have difficulty dealing with or coping with an empty nest when children begin leaving home to live their lives as adults.
It’s time to get busy! Put your thinking cap on and get those creative juices flowing, and come up with a “What I Can Do Now” list now that the kids are grown and gone. Go back to school to get your high school diploma, or get the college degree you always wanted. Rekindle the romance with your spouse and 

