Sentences with phrase «in hospitals feel»

So, while I sat there in the hospital feeling slightly lost and confused, my dear friends sent food.
You packed the camera, you packed the chargers, not to mention a couple of baby outfits or layette for coming home from the hospital as well as your favorite blanket and pillow to make your short stay in the hospital feel as much like home as possible.
From the first night in the hospital I felt like we both needed to be close to eachother and couldn't stand the idea of her sleeping in another room.

Not exact matches

Upon discharge from the hospital, more than 25 percent of SCI patients have complete paraplegia, meaning they are unable to feel or move their legs; more than 20 percent suffer from complete tetraplegia, or paralysis in all four limbs and the torso.
A simple log of your sexual activity is not very useful by itself, except to perhaps make people feel good or bad about themselves, said Dr. Elizabeth Kavaler, a specialist in female urology at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.
5) Religious Clothing in Public Sector: «Do you agree or disagree you feel uncomfortable when served or attended to by a government employee wearing a turban, a hijab or a yarmulke or other religious clothing or symbols in a government institution like a school or hospital
Creed in action: Six years ago, KGH patients and families said they didn't feel safe in the hospital.
If there happens to be a large, renowned hospital group in the area, the employer feels compelled to offer coverage that includes this institution, even if that system is highly over-priced (the largest hospital systems typically have the highest procedural prices).
If you are still feeling unsure, ask for a callback number in this case, too, and contact another family member to find out if there is any possibility your cousin Emma is stuck in a hospital in London before you start wiring money.
When Hurricane Irma barreled into South Florida in September, the 10 Tenet Health hospitals in the region felt ready.
I felt a great deal of empathy with the authors comments having spent two days in December with my Mother and two sisters as we gathered around my father at the hospital during his last hours.
It is good procedure for the minister to phone the hospital in advance of a call to ascertain whether the medical staff feels that the person should have visitors at a certain stage in his recovery.
One of several values of clinical pastoral training in a mental hospital is that it provides an opportunity to work through feelings about oneself in relation to deeply disturbed persons.
I started at Hope International University in Fullerton, which felt a bit like a homecoming as it was one of the first schools I visited when I began speaking, and one of the most welcoming and hospital communities you will meet.
For one thing, as women begin to feel strong and to see that they have far more potential than they have ever imagined, they are less apt to land in mental hospitals.
The longing to belong in some ultimate sense, to feel an at - homeness in the universe is satisfied for many in worship which reawakens the awareness of «the mystical unity which underlies all human life» (Cyril Richardson) This experience is energizing, feeding, and healing; it overcomes the sense of cosmic loneliness, the feeling expressed by a mental hospital patient: «I'm an orphan in the universe.»
A United Church of Christ minister confided that he uses grape juice in his cup while the congregation receives fermented wine — a deception he feels he can not share with his official board or parishioners, but a necessary one following hospital treatment for alcoholism (his absence was reported as a hunting trip in Canada).
Then suddenly, on February 1, 2009, feeling suddenly extremely tired in a way I had never experienced before, I was taken to the University of Virginia Hospital.
Councillor Toby Neal at Nottingham City Council was quoted by the Nottingham Post as saying: «Whilst respecting the court's decision, I feel the judge has missed the point of us bringing this action, which was to protect people from feeling bullied and intimidated while accessing hospital services - something we don't welcome in our city.»
If you are surrounded by jelly - faced toddlers or thousands of longing hungry souls, or if you lift your head to find yourself in a hospital or a back alley or a church or an orphanage or your own suburban kitchen, if you are given a voice for dozens or only one other soul, you are a minister, feel it, say the words, roll them against your teeth: you have been commissioned for the work of the Gospel, in Christ Jesus, you have.
Somehow the change is connected with the feeling I had as I stared at him in his bassinet the first night we were home from the hospital.
Out of his personal struggles with psychosis and many years» experience as a hospital chaplain, Anton Boisen concluded that the most damaging feelings in mental illness are the sense of awful isolation and the feeling of unpardonable guilt.
(In my hospital room we recall various happenings in the last three years that typify our common experience and present feelingsIn my hospital room we recall various happenings in the last three years that typify our common experience and present feelingsin the last three years that typify our common experience and present feelings.)
To be the only chaplain in a 170 - bed hospital filled with a great number of people who are quadraplegic; to try to help these people rediscover and / or redefine a life value and quality that they often feel has been lost; to grow to care greatly about these people; to do all these things and yet deep, deep inside, to feel that you would rather be dead than be quadraplegic — that's hard to admit.
You can't give people a hug when they're feeling upset via web cast, nor can you make a meal for them when they are sick, nor can you remotely visit them in the hospital.
Thanks, Gretchen — yes, a very stressful week, and he is not out of the woods yet, but at least he's in a hospital in his own city so he feels better about being «home».
That sacrificing the time to run to town for extra ingredients so you can work in a hot kitchen to make meals for those who just got out of the hospital makes you feel good.
There are people who are quick to suggest that kids shouldn't sit that close, which makes me wonder how much better I'd feel if it were a 26 - year - old in the hospital instead.
That is nothing compared with the pain he felt last April when he woke up in the surgical recovery room at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, Calif. «The nurse recommended morphine,» he recalls, «and I said no.
The Colts, with their No. 1 quarterback, John Unitas, still in the hospital with broken ribs suffered last week, came into the game feeling an apprehension which quieted the dressing room as the players suited up.
I'm feeling half dead, and they're coming up to me in the hospital for hope.
The player was sent home, but began to feel dizzy, so he was sent to the Mitre Hospital where he has been in intensive care since last night.
He had an MRI at the hospital but thankfully he started feeling better in the following days.
I've been thinking a lot about this recently — I feel like I am setting my students up for «failure», since I know that the things in the video's I show are not very realistic or possible in the hospitals in our state / area.
Baby # 2 was born at home, but my first one was in a hospital and though we'd planned ahead that he wouldn't be circ'd, one morning I had a dreadful feeling and sent my hubby off to get the baby RIGHT NOW!
WOW — how very empowered I felt — especially knowing how things were in the «old school» military hospitals when my mom had me.
For someone who strongly believes in the power of UC, if they were forced to have their baby in a hospital and something awful happened, they'd have to live w / that consequence and would feel terrible about it.
Why do people feel the need to heap blame upon a grieving mother, especailly without ever considering the number of infant deaths in the hospital?
Women need to be allowed to choose how they birth, we should feel for those who have no choice, but that works both ways, those who have no access to medical care, and those forced to give birth in a hospital surrounded by strangers and machines.
But I also know what it feels like to be in a hospital and not feel cared for in the least.
If a woman feels comfortable in a hospital setting, she will not feel threatened or fear, her labour should hopefully be fine as much as possible and she will hopefully have as great a birth as possible.
Education during pregnancy rarely has anything serious to do with breastfeeding, and since breastfeeding is perceived by most pre-parenthood women to be a natural, instinctive thing instead of a learned behavior (on both mom & baby's part) if it doesn't go absolutely perfectly from the first moments they may feel something is wrong with THEM and clam up about it while quietly giving the baby the hospital - offered bottle along with the bag of formula samples they give out «just in case» even if you explicitly tell them you're breastfeeding (which was my experience with my firstborn in 2004 and one of the many highly informed reasons I chose to birth my next two at home).
Their job is to make sure kids in the hospital understand what's going on around them and help them feel more comfortable.
The nurse who took care of me in the hospital explained that, «Once you wrap them with a swaddle they relax and calm down, because they feel safe and secure just like in the arms of their mama.»
Here are some great ideas to make her feel more comfortable in her few days in the hospital and when she gets home with baby.
I didn't have to share a room with anyone or feel forced to stay in a hospital for days.
Most people that choose to birth at home have only chosen after extensive research and feel that the small risk of a serious complication is preferable to the high rate of intervention in a hospital setting (including the 33 % national caesarean section rate.)
Remember too, that when you were in the hospital, it felt easy and comforting with nurses around all the time, but now that you are all on your own, you might feel a bit overwhelmed.
Changes in the structure of the nuclear family, long distances between extended family members and overall social isolation along with short postpartum hospital stays can leave new parents feeling adrift - stressed and unsure.
Families that chose to birth at home or in the birth center tend to view pregnancy and birth as a natural process, not an illness, and therefore feel that the hospital or the «medical» model is not the appropriate approach to childbirth.
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