Sentences with phrase «in conversation with the kids»

If you find friction in the conversation with your kids, let it go and revisit at a later time.

Not exact matches

Choi's takeaway from her conversation with Roberts was that she should get her kids more involved in cooking.
I remember a conversation in 2000 with a fellow VC who lamented that they didn't invest in Ariba because the kid had no business experience but it was a hot IPO.
In our conversation, Business Insider talked with Kelly about what he saw in space, what he missed back on Earth, and how he went from a kid who couldn't focus into one of the most celebrated astronauts of our timIn our conversation, Business Insider talked with Kelly about what he saw in space, what he missed back on Earth, and how he went from a kid who couldn't focus into one of the most celebrated astronauts of our timin space, what he missed back on Earth, and how he went from a kid who couldn't focus into one of the most celebrated astronauts of our time.
Because later on you know five 10 years later and I'm looking back I was having a conversation with my kids one time and I was saying well you just have to take 100 percent responsibility for anything that happens in your life.
My son found his way into pick - up games on a public plaza with adults and kids from Germany and the Czech Republic and conversations in stadiums with Italians and Spaniards.
This doesn't have to be a long, heartfelt conversation, in case you're worried your kid brother is just going to start bringing up bands you've never heard of with names like «Nightmares of Fallen Empires.»
I've had way more meaningful conversations with kids at 2 a.m. while we're playing Playstation than I ever have in a church setting.
Having these conversations with other leaders in my children's lives has helped my kids have a more «normal» church experience.
I was tempted at first to give maybe a 10 point list of advice for parents going through deconstruction in front of their kids... things like let them see the books you read and answer their curiosities about them; teach your kids how to think, not how to believe; tell them everything you're going through and let them deal with what it means for them; ask them what they believe and listen objectively and engage in conversation about it; openly share your struggles with what you're going through with the church and let them process it themselves, and so on.
But in some of my conversations before the earthquake took place, we were hearing of tremendous successes in the areas in which we were working; where people were really kind of reclaiming their area, where clean water was being instituted, where the education facilities and the way in which we were working with the local governments were getting kids a good education, where jobs were [becoming] sustainable.
What is delivered is the equivalent of awkward conversations with two people you've not seen in years and they only want to talk about their kids.
The following conversations are with other foster parents serving kids in their communities.
My sister complains that I should miss her while I'm gone too, but I can have in - depth phone conversations with her ---- you can't do that with very little kids and pets!
I've been thinking about these issues so much — not so much because of media spectacle, but because I've seen parent friends navigate their kids» paths, and also in my ongoing conversations with Laurel and Violet about differences and acceptance.
I have had conversations with fellow moms and felt that my kids are not only in a different classroom, but that they are not even at the same school, because I have only a peripheral interest in their homework.
I have conversations with «ordinary Americans» all the time, and I find their opinions about the school meals served in the very school where they send their kids, or where some even teach, to be out of touch with the foods, the variety and the quality of those foods, offered each day.
Mature conversations, keeping it generally out of the kids» view, and refusing to name - call all show a child how to deal with disagreements in a healthy manner.
But from a formal perspective, one of the things that we've done in our family is that we've chosen 11 as that age where we're going to have that formal conversation with our kids.
Many couples might discover they have little in common with their spouse anymore, and any conversation that doesn't involve the kids or household issues feels strained.
Maybe you even have a conversation with your kid where you acknowledge that you reacted in a certain way and you wish you hadn't and that you're sorry for that.
Engaging in conversations about the baby has definitely helped the kids bond with their new sibling, and also given them plenty of opportunities to express their feelings and concerns about the changes to come.
I could never have imagined how gratifying this project would turn out to be, and I look forward to lots more conversation with you as we continue to explore «kids and food, in school and out.»
I have seen children who are already five screaming and hanging off their parents legs in the morning, I have had conversations with parents of older children who are struggling with their phonics and have heard from the parents of five year olds that their kids are also exhausted after a day of school, just like Leo is.
P.S. Entering codes may be a great way to start a conversation with your older kids and get them engaged and interested in helping fight child hunger!
After reading about their life and having a conversation with Ruben about our own mostly non-Christian upbringings (I'll spare you the details...), we're both encouraged by the fact that we're bringing our kids up in a Christian home.
In a recent conversation with other parents, I discovered that many of us are coddling our kids.
I feel like the best conversations with my kids always happen when they're moving, like when we're taking a walk or driving in the car.
#TalkEarly was created with a simple goal in mind: Empower parents to be confident about their own decisions regarding alcohol, model healthy, balanced behaviors, and create a foundation for starting conversations with their kids from an early age.
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Sage Parents are wise and discerning women who are likely to co-sleep with their babies, breastfeed their toddlers, forgo spanking, time outs, and reward charts in favor of a hug and face - to - face conversation to meet the underlying need, homeschool their kids, and long for family travel, seeing themselves as natural parenting rebels with big hearts who need some trusted guidance to live the family life of their dreams.
However, I am reminded of our conversations about birthday cupcakes, sneaking carrots in smoothies, and a few others where you've insisted on creating a «kid - friendly» version of life that bears no resemblance to the real thing for your kids with respect to mental and emotional challenges such as refusing a cupcake when everyone else is eating them, or being confronted with the irrationality of one's own food refusals by surprise.
I'd just had a silly conversation with my mom where she tried to talk me into outfitting a table full of toys for the kids at the wedding (as if all they wanted to do wasn't to eat cake and run around after each other and hide in flower beds that were totally off limits).
Bettina I love your work against the pink slime companies trying to hide that crap in our kids (and our own) food, for the people who don't like pink slime being labeled that think of a pr campaign where the slimer from ghost busters is green and has a heartfelt conversation with kids on how mean old bettina is trying to stop him from coming over to play at lunchtime!
After my post «To spank, or not to spank» was published on APtly Said, my friend Ingrid and I had a conversation about the challenges of raising kids and how difficult it is at times to discipline them in a positive way — moreover, how hard it is to keep our composure, especially when we are distressed with other matters in our lives.
Coloring sheets that depict a boy and girl sharing with each other allow kids to have a conversation about how they can be quick to share in their lives as well.
If I happen to have some alone time in the car with one of my kids, I do not let the opportunity for conversation go to waste.
(Airs 12/28/17) WAMC's Alan Chartock In Conversation with clarinetist and award - winning photographer and author Arlene Alda about her latest book Just Kids from the Bronx.
As Lacxewell recalled her conversation with Percoco regarding the raid on his house, she said he mentioned FBI agents had seized a laptop computer «which might have files on it that were personal to the governor in terms of his personal finances, his family, his kids, his taxes.»
Still, from the phone records in the FBI affidavit, parts of which are up on the Smoking Gun, it didn't seem like it was a woman - friendly workplace, from the male founder who said that a would - be call girl «looks like a butcher in my opinion» to the conversation about the «baggage» a worker with kids has to the outraged indignation of an applicant who was «shock and confuse» that the company expected its employees to have sex with men who don't even take them out to dinner.
It almost makes me emotional because I do think of the little kids and there's people in the community who have to have conversations with their kids about stuff that I don't.»
Through a series of in - depth interviews and observations, the researchers found that kids didn't know their toys were recording their conversations, and parents generally worried about their children's privacy when they played with the toys.
«[According to a survey by Playtex Sport], about 75 percent of teenage girls actually stop sports or stop exercising because of their period, so I think it's really important to start that conversation with kids, with teenagers, with women, so we can encourage the younger generation to not let your period get in your way.»
Where Meyers grew up, in a traditional home, the vision of meeting her prince charming and one day walking down the aisle as a bride was built into many of the conversations she had with family and friends when she was a kid.
These interests can be anything from spending time with your kids to engaging in interesting philosophical conversations.
Hi, my name is Angel, Im a full time father of two kids, 4 yrs and 2 yrs I WOULD LIKE TO MEET SOMEONE WITH WHO I COULD BE ABLE TO START A GOOD FRIENDSHIP, share interests in common, good times, a pleasant conversation, the movie theater, a restaurant.
I'm a single mom of 3 kids my 2 oldest are in college Iowa State i youngest is 12 he is special needs with Autism so I am careful about who I date, I work as an optician with Walmart Vision Center I love my job and I enjoy meeting people and conversation.
And yes, if you are 40ish, married, living in the «burbs, with kids you have definitely had one or more of the conversations / situations depicted in the film.
For his romantic roundelay Trust the Man, a New York - set movie very much in the vein of Woody Allen, Edward Burns and early David O. Russell (see review here), writer - director Bart Freundlich did his best myna bird impression — «gathering stuff from my life that I thought was funny, about the way you relate to your wife and kids, or conversations with friends about the ways that they relate to those topics,» he explains by phone — and then shaping and pruning them down, grinding them up against the age - old pressures of temptation and fear of commitment.
Starting things off, there's an audio commentary from director Mark Hartley, joined by «Ozploitation Auteurs» Brian Trenchard - Smith, Antony I. Ginnane, John D. Lamond, David Hannay, Richard Brennan, Alan Finney, Vincent Monton, Grant Page, and Roger Ward; a set of 26 deleted and extended scenes, now with optional audio commentary from Hartley and editors Sara Edwards and Jamie Blanks; The Lost NQH Interview: Chris Lofven, the director of the film Oz; A Word with Bob Ellis (which was formerly an Easter Egg on DVD); a Quentin Tarantino and Brian Trenchard - Smith interview outtake; a Melbourne International Film Festival Ozploitation Panel discussion; Melbourne International Film Festival Red Carpet footage; 34 minutes of low tech behind the scenes moments which were shot mostly by Hartley; a UK interview with Hartley; The Bazura Project interview with Hartley; The Monthly Conversation interview with Hartley; The Business audio interview with Hartley; an extended Ozploitation trailer reel (3 hours worth), with an opening title card telling us that Brian Trenchard - Smith cut together most of the trailers (Outback, Walkabout, The Naked Bunyip, Stork, The Adventures of Barry McKenzie, three for Barry McKenzie Holds His Own, Libido, Alvin Purple, Alvin Rides Again, Petersen, The Box, The True Story of Eskimo Nell, Plugg, The Love Epidemic, The Great MacArthy, Don's Party, Oz, Eliza Fraser, Fantasm, Fantasm Comes Again, The FJ Holden, High Rolling, The ABC of Love and Sex: Australia Style, Felicity, Dimboola, The Last of the Knucklemen, Pacific Banana, Centrespread, Breakfast in Paris, Melvin, Son of Alvin, Night of Fear, The Cars That Ate Paris, Inn of the Damned, End Play, The Last Wave, Summerfield, Long Weekend, Patrick, The Night, The Prowler, Snapshot, Thirst, Harlequin, Nightmares (aka Stage Fright), The Survivor, Road Games, Dead Kids (aka Strange Behavior), Strange Behavior, A Dangerous Summer, Next of Kin, Heatwave, Razorback, Frog Dreaming, Dark Age, Howling III: The Marsupials, Bloodmoon, Stone, The Man from Hong Kong, Mad Dog Morgan, Raw Deal, Journey Among Women, Money Movers, Stunt Rock, Mad Max, The Chain Reaction, Race for the Yankee Zephyr, Attack Force Z, Freedom, Turkey Shoot, Midnite Spares, The Return of Captain Invincible, Fair Game, Sky Pirates, Dead End Drive - In, The Time Guardian, Danger Freaks); Confession of an R - Rated Movie Maker, an interview with director John D. Lamond; an interview with director Richard Franklin on the set of Patrick; Terry Bourke's Noon Sunday Reel; the Barry McKenzie: Ogre or Ocker vintage documentary; the Inside Alvin Purple vintage documentary; the To Shoot a Mad Dog vintage documentary; an Ozploitation stills and poster gallery; a production gallery; funding pitches; and the documentary's original theatrical trailein Paris, Melvin, Son of Alvin, Night of Fear, The Cars That Ate Paris, Inn of the Damned, End Play, The Last Wave, Summerfield, Long Weekend, Patrick, The Night, The Prowler, Snapshot, Thirst, Harlequin, Nightmares (aka Stage Fright), The Survivor, Road Games, Dead Kids (aka Strange Behavior), Strange Behavior, A Dangerous Summer, Next of Kin, Heatwave, Razorback, Frog Dreaming, Dark Age, Howling III: The Marsupials, Bloodmoon, Stone, The Man from Hong Kong, Mad Dog Morgan, Raw Deal, Journey Among Women, Money Movers, Stunt Rock, Mad Max, The Chain Reaction, Race for the Yankee Zephyr, Attack Force Z, Freedom, Turkey Shoot, Midnite Spares, The Return of Captain Invincible, Fair Game, Sky Pirates, Dead End Drive - In, The Time Guardian, Danger Freaks); Confession of an R - Rated Movie Maker, an interview with director John D. Lamond; an interview with director Richard Franklin on the set of Patrick; Terry Bourke's Noon Sunday Reel; the Barry McKenzie: Ogre or Ocker vintage documentary; the Inside Alvin Purple vintage documentary; the To Shoot a Mad Dog vintage documentary; an Ozploitation stills and poster gallery; a production gallery; funding pitches; and the documentary's original theatrical traileIn, The Time Guardian, Danger Freaks); Confession of an R - Rated Movie Maker, an interview with director John D. Lamond; an interview with director Richard Franklin on the set of Patrick; Terry Bourke's Noon Sunday Reel; the Barry McKenzie: Ogre or Ocker vintage documentary; the Inside Alvin Purple vintage documentary; the To Shoot a Mad Dog vintage documentary; an Ozploitation stills and poster gallery; a production gallery; funding pitches; and the documentary's original theatrical trailer.
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