Sentences with phrase «children feel the results»

Not exact matches

But for the material Gibney had to work with, which includes a few wonderful interviews with old Apple employees and the mother of Jobs» first child Lisa, the result feels quite comprehensive.
And in his book, Children of the Great Depression, Glen Elder wrote that adolescents who experienced hardship in the 1930s became especially adaptable, family - oriented adults; perhaps, as a result of this recession, today's adolescents will be pampered less and counted on for more, and will grow into adults who feel less entitled than recent generations.
How does the church feel about IVF that results in the termination of many un-implanted embryos but also gives infertile couples a chance at having a child?
The pain your child feels is a direct result of your refusal to display a love that the child could believe in.
But the feeling is not only that, God made the women body to adapt to the men body, like a puzzle, if you force a piece to enter it will distort the image right it is the same things for your body, sex does not only mean baby, but it is only when you join with a compatible body that it is not a sin, God is the best doctor because he made your body, only he know the result in your body and he is also your Father, who's father do not want this child healthy or happy, or better the night thinks even if it is not your fault «why does my child as to suffer all this, and walk in the difficult road».
As a result, in order to maintain a high civilization it may increasingly become necessary to pay women «such sums for the production of children as to make them feel it worth while as a money - making career» (p. 216).
Recognising that emotional dryness may come for many reasons I have found that behaving affectionately towards my children at those times when I'm actually feeling nothing of the sort has surprising results.
But when he compares his situation with those of families whose children have a form of dwarfism or were born as a result of rape or are deaf or blind, it feels like an intrusion, if not simple narcissism.
And the punch in the gut from last week's World Vision situation (in which 10,000 children lost their sponsorship as a result of an evangelical protests) continues to leave me, and many others, feeling breathless.
Supporting that point, forum member Paul Jones pointed out that it would cost him # 118 if he signed up to the Auto Cup ticket scheme to take his nine - year - old son to a Champions League fixture at Anfield - a cost that he felt was excessive for a father and child - and he gives up his seat as a result, choosing to move to the adult and child section instead.
It is my hope that as a result of segments like the one on 20/20 and the fact that more women are feeling comfortable speaking out about long - term nursing (as evidenced by all of the comments and Tweets I received), that others will not feel like they need to be «closet nursers» nor feel pressured by family, friends or society in general to wean before they feel it is right for them and their child.
Others said they felt less anxious about the birth, more confident about bringing up a child or encouraged in thinking about what is important for the baby, as a result of their interaction with the Family Nurse.
Some of these changes can feel quite overwhelming to children and can cause disruption to their sleep as result.
The end result is that the child learns more skills to manage his feelings and not to abuse one person or take things out on them.
We were... well, we should have been grateful for the healthy children we had... but instead we felt as if we had escaped the misfortune... then we were reminded of Lyric, our son who passed ten days after birth as a result of multiple cord injuries in utero.
The whole flash card culture seems designed to make parents feel guilty and kids feel pressured, and doesn't seem to be resulting in more productive, connected, interesting people than we had back when it was enough just to be present with your children when they needed you and to interact with them throughout the day.
Sometimes, it feels like we keep trying to get the same messages across to our children with no results.
Going to bed on time will make a child feel rested and ready to learn the next day while fighting bedtime and staying up too late texting friends or watching TV will result in a child feeling groggy, cranky, and generally out of sorts the next day.
When children are constantly trying to figure out what to do in order to get a parent's love, the resulting low self - esteem creates life patterns of poor self - confidence and feelings of inadequacy.
Children feel more secure as a result of being close to their caregivers.
The result is children who * want * to help out and feel good about what they can do.
This is the authoritarian parenting model that results in the child feeling negated and the parent becoming omnipotent in the eyes of the child.
Attachment is an interpersonal, interactive process that results in a child feeling safe, secure, and able to develop healthy, emotionally meaningful relationships.
This book provides activities to help children cope with their feelings resulting from the deployment of a parent.
For the younger adoptee, it is easy to internalize the anguish of knowing that two mothers (or two sets of parents) have a claim on you and to feel some emotional tug - of - war as a result, but this is common among children of divorce as well, and nobody would force a child to live with one parent while denying the existence of the other.
Our devices can result in a child feeling anxiety or depression.
In the end, a sense of structure will eliminate power struggles, organize the whole family and help your child feel secure and independent — a winning result for a few months of concentrated effort.
But the result is that your older child may get so invested in outperforming his sibling that he'll feel threatened when your baby grows into a toddler who can dress herself.
As with point number 3 this can help the older child to still feel connected, reducing any emotional effects (and resulting difficult behaviour — which often includes sleep regression) once a new family member arrives.
Reasons cited for opposition include that divided custody is destructive of discipline, Maron v. Maron, 238 Iowa 587, 590 - 91, 28 N.W. 2d 17, 19 (1947); that it tends to induce a feeling of not belonging to either parent, Huston v. Huston, 255 Iowa 543, 552 - 53, 122 N.W. 2d 892, 898 (1963); and that in some instances it permits one parent to sow seeds of discontent concerning the other, which can result in a spirit of dissatisfaction in the children and their rebellion against authority, Bennett v. Bennett, 200 Iowa 415, 418, 203 N.W. 26, 27 (1925).
While there is nothing wrong with helping children to feel a sense of pride, that feeling of satisfaction should be the result of genuine achievement.
Some parents feel as though society is side - eyeing them for not nursing their babies; Others feel that they have not been given the support they need to have a successful breastfeeding relationship with their baby and they're struggling as a result; Others still feel defiantly proud of their choice in how to feed their child because they've had so many naysayers tell them they can't or shouldn't.
The best part about this product is that the child is sitting right at the table level meaning they feel more included in the meal and as a result seem to eat much better.
It might sound crazy to allow our children to do something «naughty,» but this kind of «sanctioned disobedience,» gets feelings out of their system, so it doesn't result in larger off - track behaviours later on.
Additionally, children who feel powerless over their lives can begin trying to recapture a sense of power by exercising excessive control over their eating with the danger of a resulting eating disorder when they get into their teen years.
Empathy may make a child's feelings more intense resulting in more angry behaviour or more tears.
McDonald's uses the occasion to tout its participation in the Children's Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative (but you already know how I feel about that group — see «Fox Guards Henhouse: Industry's «Self - Regulation» of Children's Food Advertising «-RRB-; it promises to set up a «Kids» Food and Nutrition Advisory Board;» it says the company will submit to third party verification of its efforts, the results of which will be reported publicly; and, my personal favorite, executives from the company will go on a «listening tour» next month to learn more from parents and nutrition experts on the role McDonald's can play in improving child nutrition.
«Anything that you can do to express your pain and frustration... will be beneficial, whether it's related to feeling inadequate as a parent, being tired and angry because your child isn't sleeping, or managing fights with your partner that occur as a result of the incessant crying,» says Dr. Mihalas.
The feelings that thumb sucking and pacifiers cover over are the valid results of some experience your child has had.
However, there is a distinct difference between a relatively fleeting feeling of shame from unconnected incidences and the long - standing, pervasive feeling of shame at a child's core that is the result of shame - based parenting.
While shame, as a normal emotion, is felt from time to time by everyone — being the result of conflicting interactions within a social group — it generally doesn't have long - lasting effects on a child's self - worth as long as the child is able to lean on a supportive, unconditionally loving parent to help him process his feelings.
Physical punishment is associated with a range of mental health problems in children, youth and adults, including depression, unhappiness, anxiety, feelings of hopelessness, use of drugs and alcohol, and general psychological maladjustment.26 — 29 These relationships may be mediated by disruptions in parent — child attachment resulting from pain inflicted by a caregiver, 30,31 by increased levels of cortisol32 or by chemical disruption of the brain's mechanism for regulating stress.33 Researchers are also finding that physical punishment is linked to slower cognitive development and adversely affects academic achievement.34 These findings come from large longitudinal studies that control for a wide range of potential confounders.35 Intriguing results are now emerging from neuroimaging studies, which suggest that physical punishment may reduce the volume of the brain's grey matter in areas associated with performance on the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale, third edition (WAIS - III).36 In addition, physical punishment can cause alterations in the dopaminergic regions associated with vulnerability to the abuse of drugs and alcohol.37
Sore, swollen gums, however, can make a child's face feel hot to the touch, and the resulting irritability and crying may increase the toddler's body temperature, making it appear as if he has a fever.
If you need to move your older child into another room as a result of the baby's arrival, this should be done as long as possible before the birth so that he doesn't feel displaced by the baby.
Whenever a child feels hungry, his body becomes restless and his mind starts to become active instead of relaxing, this can result in child waking up disturbed.
Some people have different feelings about rewarding your child every time they master something well, but scientific evidence shows that positive reinforcement motivates children and produces fast positive results.
Parental alienation syndrome describes a «disorder» in which a child feels unjustified and intense detachment towards one parent, as the result of the comments of the other parent.
As a result, 46 percent of moms have gone into debt, 1 in 3 are working longer hours, and 32 percent say their children feel overscheduled or frazzled at least sometimes.
Confidence, for children, is a result of feeling accepted and safe.
Because the child feels both comforted and frightened by the parent, confusion results.
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