Belief in your god is just as reasonable as a five year old's belief
in monsters under his bed.
Once upon a time, I didn't believe
in monsters under the bed.
Recommended only for folk who believe
in monsters under the bed.
Not exact matches
A belief
in the Easter Bunny, or the Tooth fairy, or the Flying Spaghetti
Monster, or Pink Unicorns, or orbiting tea pots, or
monsters under your
bed, or any imaginary creatures doesn't necessarily contradict any known evidence.
You can scare kids into staying
in bed telling them there are
monsters under the
bed.
I don't believe
in God, vampires, Santa Claus, leprechauns,
monster under my
bed, talking horses, unicorns, elves, and a thousand other things, all for the exact same reason: I see nothing whatsoever to suggest any of them exist.
Believe
in Santa Claus, leprechauns, vampires, even
monsters under your
bed if you want.
Looking
under your
bed and
in your closet provided evidence that there were no
monsters under your
bed or
in your closet.
I checked
under my
bed and
in the closet often when I was a kid, and there were never any
monsters, or monster tracks, or left behind monster pieces, so no matter how creepy the dark room may have been, the fact that there WAS NO EVIDENCE meant THERE WERE NO M
monsters, or
monster tracks, or left behind
monster pieces, so no matter how creepy the dark room may have been, the fact that there WAS NO EVIDENCE meant THERE WERE NO
MONSTERSMONSTERS.
It's like a small scared child
in a dark room claiming there is some
monster out there
in the darkness so you turn on the lights to show him there is no
monster, but he just get's more scared claiming the
monster must have hid
in the closet or
under the
bed or anywhere you havn't yet looked, and when you do look and show them nothing is there it doesn't make them relieved, they get more upset because they now believe the
monster is super fast or invisible or can teleport, because they know it's there, they can just feel it!
Children believe
in invisible
monsters under their
beds, are convinced of it no matter how reassuring you as a parent are, but we know they aren't actually real, right?
These «muslim» fantasies are coming from people who see faeries
in the garden and
monsters under the
bed.
Honey, you can believe unicorns live
in your garden,
monsters live
under your
bed, and the sky is purple and pink polka dots too and I don't care.
Being afraid of the dark,
monsters under the
bed, or being separated from you is common
in the preschool set, so don't be too concerned.
Next she was afraid of
monsters,
under her
bed or
in her closet.
Monsters under the
bed, bad guys breaking into the house, the boogeyman lurking
in the closet... as children develop active imaginations, it's very common for nighttime fear to be a side effect.
You have done us all a huge favor by pulling that
monster of self doubt out from
under the
bed where it hides
in the shadow of our own confusion and loneliness, where there is no «permission.»
Doing a full room
monster check can also reassure the child that there is nothing hiding
under the
bed or
in the closet.
You may also want to show your child there are no
monsters under the
bed or hiding
in the closet.
If your child's dream was the stuff of make - believe like
monsters or ghosts and now he's scared to stay
in his own room, try showing him that there are no
monsters in the closet or
under the
bed, but don't make a big deal over it.
If your child was upset
in the past by scary scenes
in a similar movie, you may want to reconsider the frightening moments that may be listed
in a movie's PG rating — or else you may find yourself triple - checking
under the
bed for
monsters at bedtime.
Your preschooler may worry that
monsters are hiding
in the closet or
under her
bed.
One school of experts suggests «using something imaginary to battle something imaginary,» says Mindell, who suggests putting some water
in an empty squirt bottle, labeling it «
Monster Spray,» and then spraying it in your child's room when he fears a monster is lurking under h
Monster Spray,» and then spraying it
in your child's room when he fears a
monster is lurking under h
monster is lurking
under his
bed.
Being afraid of the dark,
monsters under the
bed, or separation from you is common
in toddlers, so don't be too concerned.
Whether it is a ghost
in the closet or a
monster under the
bed, there are all sorts of creepy thoughts that can make bedtime a downright frightening experience.
«Many children project their anxieties from the day into the dark, as a
monster in the closet or
under the
bed,» says Komisar.
Not all
monsters lurk
in the closet, hide
under the
bed, or go bump
in the night;
in fact, they are all around us.
They're like
monsters hiding
under your
bed,» Ady Annuar, a graduate student at Durham University
in the United Kingdom, who presented the results at the AAS meeting
in Grapevine, Texas, said
in a statement.
Continuing with its streak of magical creations, Pixar invents an involving and fascinating world of
monsters who hid
in closets and
under beds.
For many, the scariest things are not
monsters in the closet or hiding
under the
bed.
The story involves The Night Knights, beings who protect us all from the terrors lurking
in the dark — taking on the
monsters under the
bed or
in a closet.
She's learned that real
monsters don't always hide
under the
bed or
in the closet.
In «What Remains of Edith Finch,» maybe the
monster under the
bed is a metaphor, or maybe there really is a
monster under the
bed.
As noted above, pre-school children's fears of imaginary things, such as fearing that
monsters are
under the
bed, shows their use of imagination
in thinking and play.
I tuck them
in at night, I bandage the boo - boos, and I scare away the
monsters under the
bed.