Sentences with phrase «life kind of mother»

So to the rag pile the diapers went and I happily went on my way as a Pampers for life kind of mother.

Not exact matches

[01:13] Episode introduction [01:40] Tony's mission isn't about motivating others [02:15] A different kind of coach [02:42] Tony's difficult upbringing [03:15] What Tony learned from his mentors [04:00] Having to anticipate his mother's many moods [04:40] The role important books played in Tony's life [05:30] First experience with coaching seminars [06:00] Setting goals to help others [06:50] Building his brand [07:10] Tony's start with his own seminars [08:15] Dealing with the higher level of demand [09:10] When did Tony start making investments?
If you read the sentence, the words — who the child in the mother's womb will be — mean what his / her life will lead him / her into becoming which kind of human, that is, what kind of temperament, attitudes, talents & gifts, and such that human will have.
To hold that same - sex marriage is part of the fundamental right to marry, or necessary for giving LGBT people the equal protection of the laws, the Court implicitly made a number of other assumptions: that one - flesh union has no distinct value in itself, only the feelings fostered by any kind of consensual sex; that there is nothing special about knowing the love of the two people whose union gave you life, whose bodies gave you yours, so long as you have two sources of care and support; that what children need is parenting in some disembodied sense, and not mothering and fathering.
There is only one way it could not be, and that is if you decide that it teaches that nihilism is the truth, revealed here by the pointless failure of Davis's career, so that his having to obtain abortions for women he impregnated is just another absurd, annoying, and energy - sapping aspect of that, his irrational guilt instincts causing him to have to scrounge for money, and so that his learning that one of these abortions didn't occur is just another sort of misfortune, saddling him with sentiments that he will have no way to really act upon (it is unlikely the that the mother of the child wants to see him), and probably causing him to draw some kind of superstitious karmic connection between a random coincidence of having hit a cat that looks just like one he abandoned, and his driving by the town his child may be living in.
He does not mean the feigned affection that sometimes passes for love in the church, but the genuine article — the kind of love Jesus has always shown for his disciples, the kind of love that a mother normally shows for her children, the kind of love that stands ready to lay down one's life for the other.
Remind theist frequently that they are unmarried, overweight losers whom live at home in their mothers basement, never participated in sports of any kind and have myriad issues with their sex lives.
Demonstrating the point, Mr. Williams shortly thereafter announced to a church gathering that celibacy is a kind of perversion, that monogamy (whether in hetero or homo unions) is a life - denying restriction, and that Mother Teresa of Calcutta would be a more whole person if she had sex from time to time.
Hasker's third proposition is that for the problem of divine non-intervention to be a real problem, «we must be able to identify specific kinds of cases in which God morally ought to intervene but does not» Many critics of (traditional) theism probably already have a more or less vague list of such cases, which might include genocidal events, such as the Nazi holocaust and the Rwandan massacre; wars; large - scale natural disasters; conditions of chronic poverty, in which millions of children die from starvation or are permanently stunted because of inadequate protein; the sexual molestation of children, which often leaves them psychologically scarred for the rest of their lives; death preceded by long, painful illnesses, such as cancer or AIDS, or by mind - destroying conditions, such as Alzheimer's disease; and the kinds of events described by Dostoyevski, such as the soldier using his pistol to get a mother's baby to giggle with delight and then blowing its brains out.
Let's let all women, whether single, married or divorced, mothers or childfree, celebrity or not, just be women — or better yet, people, with no expectation of what kind of person they should be or the kind of life they should have.
The organization received an email from a future mother who found out her baby will be born with Down Syndrome, and asked what kind of life her baby will have.
In the 1950s, Mary Ainsworth joined Bowlby in England, and a decade later back in the U.S. began to diagnose different kinds of relationship patterns between children and their mothers in the second year of life.
It was the ideal time and place for me; I got over my feeling of isolation, talked to other new mothers about my new life, asked all kinds of questions, attended workshops and information sessions, met a lactation specialist and did the thing I liked best: the weekly weigh - in!
It behooves mothers, if they really want to stay connected with their daughters and help them make smart decisions in their social life, to take another look at the kind of relationship they have, and their own parenting style.
In such cases, having the baby in a hospital provides the kind of safety net that provides for extreme situations where either the life of the mother or the baby is at great risk.
Instead of a young, irresponsible, uncaring teenager, the person we got to know over the next few weeks was a kind, compassionate, university - educated mother whose biggest desire was to provide her son with the life she couldn't give him.
What kind of mother gives her child a bottle after only a few hours of life, confusing the poor baby about what it should and shouldn't be doing?
We are very kind, respectable, loving and honest people.Im a good mother, have a trying at times but great son who respects me and understands im his mother not his bff, And in my opinion the problem is ppl who do nt understand why god wants us to correct our children by not sparingthe rod... sure, some moms do nt wan na be the bad guy and «spank» bc god forbid their kid grows up to be violent - yet today most of society refuses to spank - and yet today we live in a world filled with so much murder, stealing, and crimes that i honestly believe if they had parents following gods word and disciplining like they did back in the day when older generations knew what they were doing we would live in a better world.
Those kinds of experiences, trivial as they may seem, can make you feel as though you're going to accomplish less in life as a mother than you otherwise might as a childless woman.
When we have moms who are going home from the hospital and they're stepping right back into their lives, he said that that's kind of ridiculous, when you look into some of these other cultures where mothers are pretty much sort of isolated and cared for anywhere from 6 weeks to 3 months after the baby is born.
Mother's have breastfed to war and famine and all kinds of miserable life experiences.
I think there's a lot surrounding this topic that's so wrapped up in very qualitative issues of how we see ourselves as mothers and what our relationships with our babies are all about, statistics about who breastfeeds for longer (when I get the impression that pretty much everything after 1 year for babies living in developed nations is kind of a wash, health - outcomes-wise) probably don't come into play for most parents.
Despite all the anticipatory parenting done before conception and during pregnancy, despite weeks of feeling movement within and fantasizing about your baby, despite months of having strange dreams, worrisome thoughts, and musings about what kind of parent you will be, the first time you hold your baby in your arms and call yourself mother or father, mama or papa, mommy or daddy, an awareness floods over you that life will never be the same again.
The IBCLCs I've interacted with understand the vulnerable nature of that time in a mother's life and the importance of providing the right kind of support.
Though Earth Mama Angel Baby's selections are mostly geared toward women in the mothering stage of life and for their little ones, you can find all kinds of organic bath and nurturing products that would be suitable for many.
The headline on the cover of the September 10, 1965, issue of Life — alongside a hulking machine whose heavy arm nearly eclipsed the mother under examination — read Control of Life: Audacious Experiments Promise Decades of Added Life, Superbabies with Improved Minds and Bodies, and Even a Kind of Immortality.
Mother Dirt products actually contain live AOBs and add them back onto your skin where they act as a kind of «peacemaker» between good and bad bacteria.
Calling out how social media has become the «highlight reel» of our lives, the fitness influencer wrote that she wanted to be as real as possible with her followers, giving them a chance to see her imperfections along with her high points: «Imperfections make you real, approachable, human and one of a kind,» added the mother of three.
When a mother has found out she's going to have a baby, her whole life — her diet, her mood, her energy — should kind of prepare her.
My mother lives right next door, it's kind of like a sitcom at times.
Ihave been a widow for the past 14 years I'm a kind loving woman and mother of two Marrried daughters and three precious grandbabies am looking for that special key holder to open up my heart to be my companion my best friend my lover my everything my last chapter in my life I love...
I am a 52 year old mother of 3 girls all grown and grandmother of 3, looking for a gentleman who loves family life, powwows, animals, and who is kind in spirit and all that it entales.i am new to my I pad will load some pics soon.i am of Cherokee, creek decent, 5 ft. 8in.
What kind of charisma would it take to convince a mother to murder her children rather than let them live in a world where the Nazi party was dead?
«At the heart of it all is The Little Girl (Mackenzie Foy), who's being prepared by her mother (Rachel McAdams) for the very grown - up world in which they live — only to be interrupted by her eccentric, kind - hearted neighbor, The Aviator...
Meredith (Ellen Pompeo)'s love life has taken a backseat throughout this season of Grey's Anatomy, and for good reason: her fling with Riggs wasn't meant to last, as she'll probably never get over Derek, so the best thing she can do is channel her broken heart into mending the bodies of others and enjoy the same kind of acclaim and accomplishment as her mother once did.
Shifting temporarily back into semi-lucidity, the film then presents a series of memories, mostly from the perspective of Jack O'Brien, an adolescent boy living in suburban Texas in the 1950s with his domineering father (Brad Pitt), kind hearted mother (Jessica Chastain) and two younger brothers.
His harrowing journey is told through the international cast of characters who have been involved in Sudan's life, from when he was snatched as a calf from his mother's side in war - torn Central Africa, to his captivity as a prized exhibit in a cold, concrete zoo behind the Iron Curtain while poaching devastated his kind to extinction back home.
I, Tonya director Craig Gillespie (Lars and the Real Girl) presents the events of Harding's life as a kind of ludicrous and darkly comedic story, with Margot Robbie playing Harding as both trashy and defiant, an athletic wonder and also a habitual liar, plagued by toxic relationships with her mother (an excellent Allison Janney) and later her husband, played with pathetic aggression but also an undercurrent of pure infatuation by Sebastian Stan.
But life at home with his mother (Teri Garr) isn't quite the same for the timid boy that now has to endure the attention of classmates and neighbors who consider him a kind of epic hero.
She loves her mother and her mother loves her, but there is just no way Halley can give little Moonee any kind of normal life where she'll thrive.
And by the end of Stories We Tell, Polley admits (when pressed by her father) that her Big Theme is kind of bullshit, and may just be a way of avoiding her own complicated feelings about her mother, her father, and the people whose lives they affected.
«Lady Bird» is a coming - of - age story about a teenager living in Sacramento whose fraught relationship with her mother provides the spine to her year fumbling toward some kind of self - reckoning.
The story follows a teenager's life as her mother (Eva Green) suddenly disappears, and there's some kind of surreal, dream element to the narrative in this teaser trailer.
Larson, not a mother herself in real life, surely had the right kind of relationship with her own mother in order to really get that.
She's living a beautiful life with two loving parents but when tragedy strikes, her mother leaves her with simple but strong words of advice: «Have courage and be kind
Just like my mother cared about mine and wanted the best for me, so do the families of students in Washington, D.C. I have seen all kinds of families in all kinds of schools and not one of them doesn't want a great life and future for their child.
To assess the involvement of families in the lives of college students, this dissertation will include three tiers: the first two are 51 in - depth interviews with Black undergraduates and 50 in - depth interviews with their mothers, in which I will examine both students» and their mother's accounts of interactions, the kinds of support exchanged, and expectations about college and family ties; the third tier includes 33 in - depth interviews with college personnel to provide and institutional perspective on the ways in which these offices interact with families and shape policy to address their concerns.
That her own mother refused to take responsibility for her own actions, like living such a messed up life, speaks to what kind of person she was.
What kind of mother blames her position in life on her child?
And, to get all psychoanalytical about it, I've been trying to understand my father for a long time now, and I think that in my own life, growing up, etcetera, my mother was sort of this buffer between him and me, in that she kind of protected me from his sadness and tried to make life fun and upbeat all the time.
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