Sentences with phrase «blanket over one's head»

If you spend all your time thinking about that, you are going to crawl into a hole, put a blanket over your head, and never come out.
I do nt want to see you eat either in public maybe you should eat with a blanket over your head or in a dirty restroom
And, as they say, if breastfeeding offends you, put a blanket over YOUR head.
JOHNSON: I was sleeping with a blanket over my head on the flight to Chicago and somewhere over Utah or Kansas, Paul wakes me up and says, «I have good news and bad news.
Because when games are right, they're like pulling a blanket over your head when you're a kid — suddenly the world goes away and nothing outside that little space even exists; it's delicious.
Or put a blanket over your head.
She's walking around in her crib like Casper the Ghost with her blanket over her head.
If you don't want to see a woman's breast as she feeds her child the way nature intended, then put a blanket over your head!
Get a drink, put a blanket over your head, and drink with it over your head for ten minutes.
Or perhaps you can enjoy your meal in the bathroom or put a blanket over your head while you're eating so the mother can breastfeed in peace...
@phdinparenting and @Lindsay - I too nurse when and where my child needs to without a blanket over her head - even now that she is 17 months old.
Her response was to ask if that person put a blanket over their head when they ate or took their food to the bathroom to eat.
Some little ones simply don't want a blanket over their head while they're eating.
On the other hand, if your baby doesn't love to eat with a blanket over their head, or if you'd rather not use one, don't.
As I have mentioned before, newborn babies are not yet strong enough to roll over or really help themselves if they pull the blankets over their heads or their face is up against a bumper.
Some babies, however, just don't love eating with a blanket over their head and in that case, it's totally okay not to use one too.
I spent many months lying in bed with a blanket over my head, reading fanfiction on my smartphone for hours before my husband came to bed.
And, they encounter unhelpful responses to their challenges with breastfeeding in public: «if other people don't like it they can throw a blanket over their heads, don't be ashamed to feed your baby».
As a toddler he used to scare me almost to death because he would sleep in his own bed but insist on having all the blankets OVER HIS HEAD.
I used to do voiceover too (but it got so time consuming and then I finally upgraded to a wireless mic which comes with its own annoyances) but anyway the best tip I can give for voiceover is to drape a blanket over your head when you speak — haha I know it sounds nuts but I'm totally serious — it will mute out EVERYTHING in the background and make your voice sound like you're in a recording studio.
To not wake up in the morning and want to throw my blanket over my head, and just go back to sleep, because if I'm asleep I don't have to remember reality.
It was when Fred Willard, after an off - screen ménage à quatre, grimaced, farted loudly, and pulled the blanket over the heads of his recent sexual conquests, yelling, «Dutch oven!»
«And they kind of put these blankets over their heads and disband into the crowd.»
From the moment she pulls her blankets over her head and refuses to get out of bed to the moment Mr. Hartwell drops her off in front of the new school, the reader is aware of, and sympathetic with, Sarah's fears.
«When I get an e-mail that mentions my child and a guillotine,» Hayhoe says, «I sometimes want to pull a blanket over my head.
My husband has actually put a blanket over his head several times when I've tried to talk to him about how I feel almost visually shutting me out?
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