![]() Throughout her career, she has covered a wide range of weather events, including hurricanes, blizzards, and extreme weather conditions. Her expertise and vibrant personality made her a popular figure among viewers. “I just think it goes a long way, and it makes everything just a little calmer and a little more manageable in the house.In 2013, Dylan joined NBC’s morning news program, “Today.” She became a regular co-host and weather anchor on the show, providing weather forecasts and reporting on various weather-related stories. As soon as I gave Calvin credit for being able to do that, it just changed the whole dynamic of our house,” she said. ![]() “Kids are totally capable of having an adult conversation. The experience showed Dreyer the power that words have to help kids identify and cope with emotions. Then we just had a conversation,” Dreyer said. ![]() “He stopped in his tracks, and he just shook his head, ‘yes.’ He comes over and he gives me a hug, and he totally calms down. When Calvin started throwing tantrums regularly, Dreyer remembered simply asking him if he wanted a hug. Like Misty the Cloud, Calvin sometimes has bad days and stormy emotions. Or if there's stuff that he liked and made him smile, and made him comment, I knew I had to keep that in there.” She said, “If there were things that he didn't understand, I knew I needed to take those out of the book or rework it a little bit. Good days and bad daysĭreyer’s sounding board and “co-editor” through the writing process was her oldest son, Calvin. Now that the book is here, I'm just so happy that I fought for it, and it's exactly what I want it to be and I didn't have to compromise,” Dreyer said. “I am so proud of myself-which is something I don't say often-but I'm proud of myself that I stuck to my guns and I knew that this is the story I wanted. You should write a book about a female meteorologist.” When Dreyer declined, saying that she preferred to write about an imaginative world in the sky, they told her, “Instead of writing from the cloud’s perspective, why don’t you write from a little girl’s perspective…a little girl who wants to be a meteorologist?”Īgain, Dreyer insisted that the book follow her original idea, and that idea has now become a reality. When she first pitched the story to editors, they said, “You’re a female meteorologist. It features a sweet little cloud who just happens to be in a very grumpy mood. Since her job involves a lot of travel, she got used to leaving and pumping breastmilk for Calvin while on the road.ĭreyer started developing the concept for her first picture book, “ Misty the Cloud: A Very Stormy Day,” with her husband 10 years ago. When her first child, Calvin, was born Dreyer said she had a “classic maternity leave.” She stayed home for three months and then returned to work. At nighttime, someone is always going to be up and needing something … I’m just sort of embracing it.” Three babies, three very different maternity leaves “I've just reserved myself to knowing that I'm not going to be able to sleep or nap during the day. With a new baby and the new children’s book, “ Misty the Cloud: A Very Stormy Day,” Dreyer, who lives in New York City, is literally working around the clock. I'm showing the boys that you work hard to get the things you want.” “He makes me feel better and less guilty about working. “He's always saying, ‘The lessons you're teaching our boys by working as hard as you work will be a part of them forever,’” she explained. “It’s been a lot of working through emotions, a lot of conversations,” Dreyer said.ĭreyer, 40, called her husband Brian Fichera her biggest supporter in her motherhood/career juggle. The book was supposed to come out in September and Rusty was supposed to arrive in November, but the two events ended up converging and Dreyer has had to occasionally step into work mode. In between caring for her 3-week-old son and connecting with her older children, Calvin, 4, and Oliver, 21 months, Dreyer has been fielding interviews and Zoom calls in her bedroom to promote her new children's book.
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