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By Kelly Parthen and Shannon Payette
Seip
Frazzled fathers prove the importance of priorities
Is it impossible to pry your son away from his video game at dinnertime?
Would your daughter rather pore over her sticker collection than talk
to Grandma on the phone? Are road trips a drag because your kids put
on their headphones instead of joining the family conversation?
If your kids ever have trouble putting relationships before things,
the new film Daddy Day Care can help them understand why people should
be a top priority. And our Ping-Pong Priorities activity
brings the lesson to life.
In Daddy Day Care, advertising executives Charlie (Eddie Murphy) and
Phil (Jeff Garlin) are fired from their high-paying jobs after their
vegetable cereal campaign flops. When the men struggle to find new jobs,
they decide to become stay-at-home dads. But instead of relishing their
newfound family time, the men dwell on the fancy offices and fat paychecks
they now lack.
Unhappy with the only preschool program in townthe no-nonsense
Chapman AcademyCharlie and Phil decide to start an entertaining
child care program called Daddy Day Care. They quickly learn that taking
care of active, sugar-craving children is not all funny business.
Charlie and Phil finally learn to bond with their sons after taking
the time to get to know their boys better. When presented with a lucrative
job opportunity, however, the men must decide whats more importanthigh-powered
positions, with all the physical trappings of success, or the relationships
theyve developed with the children.

Family Activity: Ping-Pong Priorities
Your children dont need to earn six-figure salaries to struggle
with putting people before possessions. Together, play Ping-Pong
Priorities to learn why relationships matter most.
Share!
Ask your children what Charlie valued at the beginning of the moviefrom
his cell phone to his luxury car. Then ask your children about the things
they valuefrom bicycles to baseball trophies. Discuss how these
things arent necessarily bad to have. A bicycle is fun to ride
and can help you get to school. Your trophy reminds you of your team
working hard to be number one.
Next, talk about what Charlie valued at the end of the moviefrom
his family to the kids at Daddy Day Care. Ask your kids about the important
people in their livesfrom family and friends to teachers and coaches.
Finally, discuss what happened when Charlie put possessions before people:
Charlies wife got upset when he missed their meeting at Chapman
Academy. His son was lonely because Charlie didnt take the time
to understand him. How did Charlies life change after he focused
more on his family and less on his fortune?
Play!
Materials needed:
Colored markers
Ping-Pong balls
Puffed rice cereal
A medium-sized jar or vase
Using colored markers, write the name of somebody special on one side
of a Ping-Pong ball. On the other side of the ball, draw the persons
face. Continue until youve colored all the balls. Set aside.
Tell your kids that the jar represents their lives, waiting to be filled
with people and things. The cereal stands for their thingsfrom
a cool pair of shoes to their favorite CD. The Ping-Pong balls represent
the important people in their lives.
Have your children pour the cereal in the jar until the jars full.
Then try to put the Ping-Pong balls in the jarthey wont
go in, because theres no room. Explain that if life is full of
only things, theres no room for the people who are important to
you.
Pour the cereal back in the box. This time, have your children put the
Ping-Pong people inside the jar first, then pour in the cereal. The
cereal should fill in the spaces between the Ping-Pong people. Explain
that just like Charlie learned at Daddy Day Care, life still has plenty
of room for your favorite things when you put people first.
E-mail your comments or ideas to filmfun@cinematters.com.
©2003
The pocketparent.com. All rights reserved.

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