Never put
your child on an armchair, couch or other plush area to sleep.
Not exact matches
Here are some of the excluding criteria most experts agree
on: «Obese parents; parents who smoke (either during pregnancy or at present); parents sleeping
on a waterbed, recliner, sofa,
armchair, couch or bean bag; parents who sleep
on multiple pillows, a sagging mattress or a sheepskin or use heavy bedding, such as comforters or duvets; sleeping in overheated rooms; parents under the influence of drugs or alcohol; other
children or pets who can or are likely to climb into the bed; and stuffed animals
on the bed that could cover the baby's face.»
But it's dangerous for a baby to sleep with another
child or an adult in the same bed, in an
armchair, and
on a couch.
That's how I think paleolithic man's life was: lots of walking, some climbing, carrying
children on their backs, an occasional sprint to outrun a predator or catch a small animal, squatting down when «resting» as opposed to reclining in an
armchair (keeps muscles engaged and ready to move), etc..
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Witches (1990), based
on a Roald Dahl novel (Anjelica Huston's witch has done as much damage to impressionable young minds as Jenny Agutter's skinny dipping in Walkabout), is one of the strangest
children's films ever made, but it managed to connect with both its intended audience and
armchair auteurists.
The virtues essentially stop with the shot design and the work of Edward Norton (himself being a sort of walking meta joke, as his character arrives
on scene and immediately begins
armchair directing and taking control, something for which Norton himself has been infamous
on set), and while the other actors are fine, they do not manage to separate themselves as anything other than puppets for Inarritu's agenda, who looms over every frame like some petulant
child with a grudge and a budget that allowed him to force his opinions
on an unwitting public.