Posts Tagged ‘baby center’

Working A Baby Boy Christening Gift With The Proper Resources

Baby boy gifts compared with that of baby girl gifts are at times much simpler in presentation. However when it comes to christening gift, there need not be a differentiation of gender when it comes to presentation. Likely, the idea is to actually make a presentable gift regardless of the gender of the child without actually mixing and confusing the colors of the gender based presentation of the said gifts.

In this case there are certainly several points of consideration needed to be given attention by the gift givers. Some of the said points are listed as follows:

Make the gifts presentable yet simply practical: when practicality is carried unto consideration, it is expected that the gifts are useful and highly beneficial for both the parents and the child being christened. Hence, these gifts could include diapers, shirts or baby clothes, equipments for babies, and others that could give comfort to the young ones and ease of caring for the parents.

Creating a presentable gift cover: To make gifts baby centered, the creativity of the giver should be applied in making the covers for the gifts. Ribbons and bows may at some point be used in minimum since it should be a presentation fit for a baby boy christening gift. Making it simple through creating shapes that are appealing to boys like toy car shapes, soft block shapes and others that are related to boys should be applied into serious consideration. Through the use of the giver’s creativity, making the simple gifts into these extraordinary shapes would be an exciting source of challenge.

Choose the Right Colors:  To make the gift more child friendly, the cover is suggested to be presented with the use of fabric and ribbons with the right colors that are aimed to making an implication that the gift is made as a baby boy christening gift.

With the utilization of the guidelines noted above, coming up with the right baby boy christening gift would become much easier to consider for creation. Adding up personal touch to the items to be given to the child and the parents would certainly even add personal meaning of care and concern on the part of the presented gift.

These types of baby boy christening gifts are even likely to e much appreciated for a longer time by the parents and the child compared to the more expensive items that are given to the child and his parents during the occasion. With the perfect baby christening gift idea, a gift giver shall surely make the right kind of decision in making an implicatively right choice of gift to give.

Top 10 ‘bad boy’ baby names

New parents may balk at naming their newborn boys such tried-and-true but yawn-inducing names as Michael or David — but a new study shows that if they play it safe, they may be doing their babies a favor.

Writing in Social Science Quarterly, Shippensburg University professor David Kalist says giving  newborn males oddball, girly or strange first names may just help land them in jail.

In alphabetical order, the Top 10 “bad boy” names, according to Kalist, are Alec, Ernest, Garland, Ivan, Kareem, Luke, Malcolm, Preston, Tyrell and Walter.

What’s in a name?
So if Ivan is terrible or Alec turns out to be a smart aleck, Kalist and his associate, Daniel Lee, believe they know the reason why. While noting that “unpopular names are likely not to be the cause of crime,” the social factors of being tagged with an offbeat moniker “increase the tendency toward juvenile delinquency.”

The pair based their report on a study of some 15,000 names given to baby boys between 1987 and 1991. They found that the more unlikely the name, the more likely a boy is to commit a delinquent act.

In revealing the 10 “most likely to” list on Friday, TODAY’s Erin Burnett gave her own interpretation to the study: “Basically, if you’re teased mercilessly your entire childhood for your name, you become an angry, bitter person, and you lash out in a way that could be negative.”

While Burnett and TODAY’s Matt Lauer noted that having a name making the list of possible future criminals didn’t stop the likes of Alec Baldwin and Ernest Hemingway from succeeding in life, there are plenty of prior studies that back up the Kalist report.

In writing about the Social Science Quarterly report, Time magazine pointed to a 1993 study that showed boys who have strange spellings of common first names (read Patric, Geoffrey) are less likely to be upstanding and successful; a 2001 study showing that boys are judged for their moral character and masculinity by their first names; and a University of Michigan study that stated, “having an unusual first name leads to unfavorable reactions in others, which then leads to unfavorable evaluations of the self.”

Exceptions to the rule
Still, what’s in a name? TODAY looked at the list of 10 heading-for-trouble names and found an example of each that could refute the findings. Along with Baldwin and Hemingway, there’s pop singer-songwriter Garland Jeffries, film director Ivan Reitman, basketball Hall of Famer Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, actors Luke Wilson and Luke Perry, black leader Malcolm X, legendary filmmaker Preston Sturges, Olympic gold medal boxer Tyrell Biggs, and a host of Walters — from Walter Cronkite to Walt Disney to Sir Walter Scott.

And within moments of the Social Science Quarterly report’s release, many Web sites were already poking fun at it. Writing on the Laughing Stork Web site, Candy Kirby commented, “People warned my parents I would end up a hooker or a stripper if they named me ‘Candy.’ And look at me. I NEVER dabbled in prostitution!”

The Kalist-Lee study also touched on baby girl names, noting that previous research showed a baby gal given the name Allison is seldom the daughter of high school dropouts — and that, on the whole, the less schooling they have, the more likely parents are to give their kids unpopular names.

While male names have traditionally gone the John-Steve-Michael-Matthew route, recent surveys have shown parents are getting a bit more creative. Baby Center reports that Aiden, Hayden, Jackson and Noah were among the Top 10 names for newborn boys last year — Michael finished only 14th, James 32nd, and John a lowly 55th.

Just don’t tell that to Ivan.

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