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Kylie Kelce Makes Bold Confession About the 'Difficult Parts' of Parenting
Kylie Kelce Makes Bold Confession About the 'Difficult Parts' of Parenting

Yahoo

time01-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Kylie Kelce Makes Bold Confession About the 'Difficult Parts' of Parenting

Kylie Kelce Makes Bold Confession About the 'Difficult Parts' of Parenting originally appeared on Parade. didn't hold back on some of the challenges she's faced as a parent. On the latest episode of the Not Gonna Lie podcast on July 31, the 33-year-old revealed that she thought feeding her kids is one of the hardest parts of being a parent. Kylie, a mom of four daughters with her husband , called the task "the most underrated, difficult parts of parenting." "It's difficult because before I had children, I could do 'girl dinner,'" she explained. "I could slice off a few slices of cheese. I could eat a handful of Tostitos chips. I could eat an apple with peanut butter, and that could constitute my dinner." But now as a parent, Kylie revealed that now as a mom, "we have to eat three meals a day" rather than be able to put together a low effort meal for the family. "The decision-making is overwhelming. I will tell you that," she continued. "The need for being prepared. It's just — it's so much. It's so much. It takes up so much of my brain." 🎬SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox🎬 In the same episode, Kylie also addressed the strict restrictions she plans to implement on her daughters when it comes to cell phone use with a plan called the "kitchen phone." "There will be one or two extra cell phones besides mom and dad's cell phone,' she explained. "That they can take with them if they have, somewhere they're going where there will not be a a parent or if they will need to get a hold of us or if they're at something sports related, whatever.' Her daughters would be able to "use the phone on the first floor of the house,' but they will end up staying "in the kitchen" when not in use. "So they're not gonna go upstairs. Not going to the basement," she continued. "They're going nowhere but the first floor, communal living space."Kylie Kelce Makes Bold Confession About the 'Difficult Parts' of Parenting first appeared on Parade on Aug 1, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 1, 2025, where it first appeared. Solve the daily Crossword

Kylie Kelce's 'Kitchen Phone' Just Might be the Solution We Need for Our Teens
Kylie Kelce's 'Kitchen Phone' Just Might be the Solution We Need for Our Teens

Yahoo

time31-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Kylie Kelce's 'Kitchen Phone' Just Might be the Solution We Need for Our Teens

With all the information about how cell phones negatively affect kids, it's such a scary time to be a parent. I have years before my little ones reach the teen years but thinking about rules for cell phones and screentime and social media already keeps me up at night. Not to mention my 7-year-old has already asked for his own phone. (It wasn't supposed to happen this soon!) With four young daughters at home, Kylie Kelce is already thinking about phones too. And instead of letting them all get phones whenever they want or totally banning them until they move out, Kylie has a plan that's a happy medium. She just revealed her plan for the 'kitchen phone,' and we are totally stealing it. In a new episode of her Not Gonna Lie With Kylie Kelce podcast, the 33-year-old opened up about her thoughts on phones when her kids Wyatt, 5, Elliotte, 4, Bennett, 2, and Finnley, 4 months, grow up. 'I actually believe that we will be doing what I'm calling the kitchen phone,' Kylie, who shares her daughters with husband Jason Kelce, shared, per PEOPLE. More from SheKnows Why Brooke Hogan Asked To Be Removed From Dad Hulk Hogan's Will & Won't See $25 Million Fortune 'In other words, there will be one or two extra cellphones besides mom and dad's cellphone,' she continued. 'That they can take with them if they have, somewhere they're going where there will not be a parent or if they will need to get a hold of us or if they're at something sports related, whatever.' 'But that they can take one of those cell phones, that the cellphones are only kept to the first floor of the house,' she added. 'So you can still have your friends have that phone number. They can still call you. You can still use the phone on the first floor of the house. But they live in the kitchen. So they're not gonna go upstairs. Not going to the basement.' 'They're going nowhere but the first floor, communal living space,' she added. Kylie's guest Kelly Ripa added that computers should also stay in the kitchen, and Kylie agreed. My family had a kitchen phone growing up. It was tethered to the wall and would ring constantly with calls from friends and family checking in. It was a family device that allowed me and my siblings to stay connected, plan hang outs, and call our dad at work. Although basically no one has home phones anymore, Kylie's modern version of a kitchen phone brings back all the good things about community devices — which stay out of the bedroom and don't belong to any one person — with potentially fewer harmful effects that cell phones have on kids and teens. For the record, we also had a desktop computer in the family room, which I would also love to bring back. We need a place for kids to do homework and play games out in the open, and I love the idea of a family desktop that kids could use instead of my laptop. If we all turned to this method, our kids would probably be happier too. After all, in a recent conversation with members of our SheKnows Teen Council, many agreed to giving up their personal smartphones if everyone else did. Like 17-year-old Kaya, who gave up her phone for summer camp and felt free. 'I didn't want my phone back, because I knew I would get overwhelmed by, like, everything I missed, and I was happy not knowing it,' she told us, adding that the relief from not being tethered to technology was short-lived. 'Once I had [my phone] back, everyone was texting me, and I was like, 'what happened?' You can see that everybody's up to date, and you feel behind. Then you just feel … not pressured, but sort of pressured.' She added, 'If nobody had a phone, I would be completely fine,' Kaya says. 'But if I was the one without it, that would be really hard.' Clive, 16, says that he doesn't use his phone 'that much' during the day other than for texting. 'It's like, if no one had a phone, it wouldn't be an issue,' he told us. 'But everyone's so used to having phones, it's like, I can't be the only person without a phone.' Kylie didn't mention if the kitchen phones would be smartphones or flip phones, but an old school flip phone might be a good idea. 19-year-old Quinn recently traded his iPhone for a flip phone and feels much happier. 'Me getting rid of my phone wasn't a statement about society; I just made a conscious effort to get rid of the number one stressor in my life,' Quinn told SheKnows. 'And now that I have, I'm living a considerably better life. I'm having a much better time. It's hard for some people to understand, but it's really not that complex. Phones aren't good for people's mental health.'Best of SheKnows 20 Best Brands to Shop for Trendy Hipster Kids' Clothes This Summer This Is What Summer Looks Like When You're a Royal Kid Celebrity Parents Whose Kids Have Big Age Gaps Solve the daily Crossword

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