Sentences with phrase «guilt about spending»

It makes it super easy for you to save money and not feel guilt about spending what's left over.
Sure, for many families it is, but for some it isn't going to be, and you should not have a shred of guilt about spending a few days or even weeks in disposables.

Not exact matches

With all the insane pressure around these parts in particular, I spent a long time working through my guilt about not living up to the «granola» standard birth.
Also learn more about coping with feelings of guilt about not being able to spend twentyfour hours a day with your child.
With my daughter, I felt so much guilt about not being able to breastfeed her exclusively that I spent hours feeding her with a supplemental nursing system and also pumping around the clock every day.
«Perhaps if you were part of a culture that actually felt less ambivalent about mothers working, and had a system of child care in place where it was okay for mothers to work, I think you would automatically feel less guilt and pressure to spend more time with kids,» she said.
And while I feel guilty about a whole lot of things as a mother — as Jong admits she also does in her essay — I don't feel one iota of guilt about my decision to breastfeed or spend plenty of time with my kids.
I actually wrote a very similar post yesterday about this exact pressure from others and the guilt I sometimes (temporarily) feel when I'd much rather spend the night in with my kid, whose company I very much enjoy.
If guilt and uncertainty about her parenting choices were cash, my friend could spend her life cruising the Caribbean.
The takeaway for some commentators: It's time for busy moms to let go of the guilt they feel about not spending enough time with their kids.
You want to get the kids taken care of without spending cash, so you don't suffer from any «mommy guilt» about blowing the grocery budget on your sitter.
«Emotions such as guilt about where time is being spent or fear over loss of income both generate stress, and make a person feel more pressed for time than they actually are.»
Guilt from not spending enough time on personal life often conflicts with guilt from not working enough, she says, but «I try to be disciplined about both commitments, and I've learned over the years the importance of saying «no,» asking for help when I need it, and practicing self - care.&rGuilt from not spending enough time on personal life often conflicts with guilt from not working enough, she says, but «I try to be disciplined about both commitments, and I've learned over the years the importance of saying «no,» asking for help when I need it, and practicing self - care.&rguilt from not working enough, she says, but «I try to be disciplined about both commitments, and I've learned over the years the importance of saying «no,» asking for help when I need it, and practicing self - care.»
If we women weren't talking to each other about guilt and counting calories and the gym and dieting, what would we spend that intellectual energy on?
In the first part of the film, she can only talk about the guilt she feels about not spending enough time with her struggling artist husband.
I have read so many books of historical fiction about WWII and studied the war in non-fiction but I haven't spent much time looking at the every day life of women in Germany after the way and the extremes of guilt and bitterness depending on the role of the men in their lives or their own choices during the war.
Or, if anyone from Marriott is reading this and doesn't like those ideas, how about spending less money on innovations like this (i.e ones that no one is really going to care about) and a bit more money on the salaries paid to the maids in housekeeping so that guests aren't being guilted into tipping every time they check in to a Marriott?
You won't find a Dutch mother expressing guilt about the amount of time she spends with her children — she will make a point of finding time for herself outside motherhood and work.»
You need a lawyer to spend the time looking for the little mistakes that the police may have made — errors that can raise doubt about your guilt.
They may feel a range of emotions — jealousy for parents spending more time with the child with the disability, guilt for complaining about the strains that the child with the disability puts on the family, or joy when their brother or sister accomplishes something new for the first time.
In addition, feeling personally responsible for the transgression (i.e., «it was my fault»), spending more time thinking about their transgression, and perceiving the transgression to be severe, elevated the transgressor's guilt.
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