|
"The
Mother of All Clubs" (2/16/04)
By
Pam Mellskog
The
Daily Times-Call
LONGMONT
-
Everyone may love a baby - but not one screaming at the movies, on the
hiking trail or even at some play groups.
Enter
Moxie Moms , a catch-all parent/child association that in November
debuted in Boulder to go together where woman and child normally won't
go alone, according to Susan Lavelle, Moxie Moms president and founder.
For
instance, in mid-January the growing group of moms brought their babies
along to view "Mona Lisa Smile" at a reserved screening in Boulder's
BaseMar Twin theater.
Besides
saving themselves a baby-sitting bill and avoiding the ire of
moviegoers who bristle at a baby's squeaks and squawks, each parent got
a $3 Moxie Moms discount.
The
annual
$50 Moxie Moms membership currently nets a 15 percent discount at
nearly all of the 29 local participating retailers, service providers
and child activity centers, said Lavelle, 37.
"Sometimes
it's not as much of a money savings, but an availability issue," she
explained.
For instance, partnerships with businesses such as Clementine Art
Studio in Boulder open doors to non-members for special Moxie Moms
-geared classes. Moxie Moms special events, she continued, give
parents good reasons to branch out during a time that can otherwise
become more about pulling in.
"There
are
a lot of shy moms out there," Lavelle explained.
Even
outgoing moms worry about making waves with a little one in public
places. That explains in part why Longmont resident and part-time
Boulder County social worker Suzanne Daniels, 33, joined Moxie Moms
last week with her toddler daughter, Isabela.
"It's
great being able to find a group of people who don't mind if your
2-year-old loses it right in the middle of an activity," she said.
This
spring, the group will launch stroller fitness and personal training
with an emphasis in pre- and postnatal fitness to give members exercise
options beyond hikes, according to Lavelle.
She
also
plans on providing ways for Moxie Moms members to support women-and
family-oriented charities via pledge walks and runs.
Though
Boulder-centric now - 175 of the organization's 219 members live there
and only a dozen live in Longmont - Moxie Moms last month secured its
first Longmont partner, Sammy Bear Activity Center, a parent/child
drop-in play center.
"I'm
very
proactive about partnering with other parent-oriented,
community-minded organizations," said Sammy Bear co-owner and new
mother Kelli Epstein, 32. "The main correlation between us is, once
again, that moms are always looking for community and a place to
connect. Moxie Moms is the clearing house, and we're the venue."
To
establish other Longmont partners, Lavelle found volunteers, people she
calls city leaders. Kimberly Taylor, 30, is a stay-at-home
first-time Longmont mom of 15-month-old Connor.
"It's a great idea," she said. "I wish I'd thought of it first."
It started perking for Lavelle last September when her daughter
Isabella was just more than a year old. Her husband Joe, who has an MBA
and business experience, helped her put it on paper, she said.
Today,
Moxie Moms keeps an easy-access, Internet-based event calendar and
continues to try to live up to its name.
"People
say, 'That girl's got a lot of moxie,'" Lavelle said. "What's great
about that name is that if you don't know what it means - a lot of
times, you want to know. It is what a mom is."
For
more
information, visit www.moxie-moms.com
|