Sentences with phrase «kids sleep hard»

Not exact matches

Carl was gone for a week earlier this month, and one of my kids said to me, «This will be really hard for you, because now you'll have to get up on time instead of always sleeping in.»
It is hard to resist taking pictures of my kids when they are sleeping especially when they are like this.
It's hard to enjoy your kids if you aren't eating well or getting enough sleep.
Lol and missing sleep with having multiple other kids is just so hard.
A lot of loud noise, a lot of flashy objects all the time — constant sensory stimulation, not to mention the fact that many kids don't have a very good diet, that they don't get enough sleep and that they're assaulted on all sides by electronic devices that are really quite hard on their brains, whether we realize it or not.
It doesn't matter how loud the area is or how hard the sleeping surface is, kids will always find a way to sleep when they are tired.
It's hard to get up in the morning if kids stay up late and it takes several days to get used to a new sleep routine.
It can be hard for kids to transition from summer fun to maintaining daily schedules, doing homework, and getting plenty of sleep.
They literally sleep at the same time, every single day and through hard work, commitment and consistency you can also have your kids sleeping at the same time too!
As a kid I used to think being in the back seat of the car for a few hours was a pain... but I realised that choosing a place to go, navigating, divvying out pre-packed snacks, taking emergency bathroom breaks en route, and putting kids to sleep in new beds was much, much harder.
And it's not because my kids are super amazing and I am super lucky to be blessed with angels from heaven, it's because I put in hard work to get them on a schedule from birth to ensure better sleep.
As with babies and toddlers, parents often have sleep struggles with their kids that require hard choices and confident parenting.
It's bad enough when parents give each other a hard time about how their babies are sleeping — like it's a badge of good parenting, not just that you might have lucked out (some kids are great sleepers from the start — luckily for them, they miss out on being left to scream until they vomit or give up altogether), but when professionals tell parents it's OK to ignore an EIGHT WEEK OLD baby (he's just come out of the womb, folks — this is the fourth trimester), they are normalising abuse.
«Letting kids stay up late and then sleep in is only going to make it harder to get back on schedule for the week,» Breuner says.
It turns out that managing four kids under the age of six is hard, especially when you don't get to sleep at night.
When parents split up some kids have a hard time sleeping on their own.
A tired kid will always have a hard time sleeping at night.
Is the controversial extinction method of sleep training harder on older kids than young babies?
Wendy Flynn, One Tough Mother Runner [«The Hobby That Changed My Life»] Wendy Bradford, Mama One to Three [«Less Whine and More Wine»] Hallie Lord, Moxie Wife [«The Gift of Imperfection»] Leslie Marinelli, The Bearded Iris [«I Suddenly Have a Mom Mullet»] Michelle Lehnardt, Scenes from the Wild [«Big Kids Need Tucking In, Too»] Nina Badzin, NinaBadzin.com [«Shine and Let Others Shine»] Debbie Koenig, Words to Eat By [«We're All Just Faking It»] Rachel Balducci, Testosterhome [«Words You Shouldn't Be Scared Of»] Kimberley Clayton Blaine, TheGoToMom.TV [«Moms, Don't Be Camera Shy»] Kristen Levithan, Motherese [«It's Not Always All On Me»] Amber Strocel, Strocel.com [«Know What You Need»] Stacie Billis, One Hungry Mama [«I'm Not Above Asking for Help»] Kathryn Whitaker, Team Whitaker [«Learn to Love the Unplanned»] Jill Herzig, Editor - in - Chief of Redbook [«Sometimes It's Best to Do Nothing»] Alicia Ybarbo, producer at NBC's TODAY [«The Secret To «Me» Time»] Dana Points, Editor - in - Chief of Parents [«The Dishes Can Wait»] Rachel Hollis, My Chic Life [«Permission To Be Awesome»] Erin, Home with the Boys [«Our Kids Are Capable»] Rachel Turiel, 6512 and Growing [«The Romance of Gratitude»] Shawn Ledington Fink, Awesomely Awake [«Being Together is Enough»] Danielle Smith, Extraordinary Mommy [«It's Okay to Drop Some Balls»] Ronnie Tyler, Black and Married with Kids [«It's Hard to Forgive Yourself»] Christine Koh, Boston Mamas [«Done is Better Than Perfect»] Ilana Wiles, Mommy Shorts [«Sleep When Baby Sleeps?
In fact, I think you guys have done an excellent job with a kid who sounds like he has a hard time sleeping by himself.
Kids that don't get enough sleep during the night can be irritable and have a hard time controlling their emotions.
It was hard for the kids to understand this new sleeping arrangement — and I constantly listened for his movements around the house.
Sleep habits die hard, especially with kids, so the day your child sleeps in their own bed, in their own room, is probably the day you tell them they have to.
She had to put back the blanket, tuck her kid in it, then tried hard to sleep again.
Sleep - deprived kids can become hyper or irritable, and may have a hard time paying attention in school.
But the truth is that kids can have a harder time sleeping if they're overtired.
Although having to go through IVF and gestational diabetes and 2 c - sections and Joey's NICU / nursery stays and both kids self weaning were all huge emotional and physical traumas for me (and my husband), now that they're in the past and I'm a mommy to two amazing toddlers, I can see that it all worked out how it was supposed to.And my advice to all new mothers who hope / plan to nurse take a breastfeeding class when pregnant, have a breastpump in the house before the baby is born, buy nursing bras that have front panels that you can open easily (and bring some to the hospital with you when you go to give birth), don't be afraid to pump and let someone else give the baby a bottle of your milk when you need to sleep, hold off on introducing baby food until much closer to 1 year old than 6 ohtnms, and be prepared for it to be hard and possibly painful at first (think cracked, bleeding nipples and breasts that are so full of milk you think they will explode so also have lanolin and / or nipple cream in the house, and nurse or pump well before you let yourself become engorged and in pain).
The mere presence of digital devices in bedrooms may rev kids» brains up, making it hard for them to sleep, a new analysis suggests.
Between work, kids, and just the general chaos of life, most of us have a hard time finding enough time in our day to workout, let alone eat and sleep.
Yes, it was hard for awhile, though now that my kids are three and five I actually get quite a bit of sleep.
The bed issue is challenging for me, mostly because I feel so strongly that my family sleep on something non-toxic and also because of a back issue that makes it hard for me to get comfortable — especially with squirmy kids around.
When kids (and adults) are sleep - deprived, their bodies release hormones including cortisol, adrenaline, and noradrenaline, which give them a second wind at bedtime and also make it harder for them go back to sleep early in the morning.
In the past I had such a hard time just getting up early in the morning but now with two kids sleep is very much non-existent.
work work work play real hard sleep repeat fun guy kids all grown up need some one to play with just moved down to AZ. looking to make new friends.
this kid stuff is cool but when they sleep that dads play hard.
Science and research makes a pretty good argument that the answer is yes; kids have a harder time focusing in the early hours, and need more sleep.
Its hard to go to sleep, hard to get out of bed to care for the kids, go to work or face my partner.
We should have opened the gifts the next morning, as those kids were so wound up, they had a hard time going to sleep.
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