Photo:erin napier/instagram

Erin and Ben Napier Share Hacks for Traveling with Kids https://www.instagram.com/p/CvxpZZ9OZeR/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=36277555-a9dc-4378-9c59-d4c312fb346a

erin napier/instagram

Erin and Ben Napierare sharing their tips and tricks for traveling with kids.

Ben, 39, shared a snap of Erin sitting with Mae on the plane, along with a blurry shot with only part of Helen in focus. He also included a photo of a bag featuring stuffed animals, tape, and other knick-knacks.

“Shout out to painters tape,@wilbursofmaineGummi lobstahs, Wesley from the seat in front of us, Helen for being an awesome traveler, and stuffed animals for helping us get an overtired 2 yr old Mae home from vacation,” he wrote in the caption.

TheHome Townstar added, “Dear@deltaflight crew, I am terribly sorry for the potato chips and granola scattered in our seats.”

The Napiers have been open about their parenting style, even explaining why they have chosen toraise their kids without electronic devices.

Erin recalled an early incident of posting Helen on social media that inspired her to make this decision inan essay for TODAY.compublished earlier this month.

“When my daughter Helen, who’s now 5, was very young, I posted a picture of her, and someone criticized the way she looked,” she wrote. “It made me see red. It made my blood boil.”

“And it seems like the criticism always comes from other women. It feels like betrayal when a fellow mother has the gall to criticize your child or your parenting,” she noted.

Erin said of her and her husband’s “informal agreement” to keep their daughters off of social media and away from smartphones: “We don’t want our kids to be disconnected. We always have said, ‘We’ll get landlines so they can call each other, and then when they’re old enough to drive, we’ll get them flip phones, and they can call and text each other.’ ”

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The experience inspired them to launchOsprey, a nonprofit that assists families with finding a community that also prohibits cell phones and/or social media — to normalize the choice — all while allowing their kids to meet other kids.

“A lot of people are like, ‘You’re so naive,’ for thinking we can keep our kids off of social media and away from cell phones. But it’s not a forbidden fruit thing,” Erin wrote.

“We don’t intend to ever treat it that way for our girls. What we intend to teach them is that you can live the most incredible life, and you can do and see and be anything in the world, if you are not tethered to something fake.”

She concluded, “This is us teaching our children: You deserve more. And you are capable of a whole lot more if you can skip social media and cell phones until you’re older. Until you’re ready, you’ll have your growing group of Osprey friends who are having the same low-tech adolescence.”

source: people.com