Not exact matches
No
one lying on their
death bed says, «I just wish I had spent more time at work...» Business success, no matter how grand, is still fleeting.
She made up her own
death bed and I for
one have no sympathy at all for what happened and I am more than happy to see her go.
@ fimeilleur the carl sagan reference was more relevant before it became obscured by all the other posts.no
one said any thing about a
death bed conversion, that is something you assumed, (when you assume you make an ass of u and me) whether you believe in God or not is irrelevant, you will ultimately confront God, at that point in carls case after
death you will know!.
As someone who has sat by the
death bed of a sister, father and mother, I full heartily agree that those looking into the thin veil that separates the living and dead, think about their loved
ones not God.
On your
death bed, no
one knows what's going to happen when you die so you focus on what you KNOW.
I have witnessed people on their
death -
bed also, and the whole world becomes very sharply focussed as the importance of those things melt away and we are left with our dying moments and as the author stated, they are always asking for their loved
ones; not theirr boss, their coach, their president, or anyone else but the
ones they love.
If you want a sermon when you are on your
death bed — then ask for
one.
On his
death bed, I hope he talks about his family... But if he was just as much of a jerk to them as his students, I imagine it will be to lament his lost opportunites and estranged loved
ones.
@Cynthia... I agree that God does not care what
one says on their
death bed....
And don't start with the BS that when
one is on their
death bed they change their POV.
On
one's
death bed it is simply «lights out.»
But
one thing I do know is that when people are alive those who are non believers go through as you are now buy on your
death bed it is hard to be an atheist.
She said that «the Quran is fake and your prophet remained in
bed for
one month before his
death because he had worms in his ears and mouth.
TG, on my
death bed I plan to reflect on my life, my loved
ones, and I will have no regrets because I did not allow religion to dictate what I can and can not do.
so you have «faith» in science, I have «faith» in God... we'll both die
one day and find out whose faith pays off... but i'm betting on most people's
death beds they don't call a scientist in to make them feel better
Get used to dying on that
death bed and telling your kids that they will be the
ones who will be facing the «second coming».
No
one can live a gospel on a
death bed.
Of the three common causes — SIDS, unknown cause, and accidental suffocation and strangulation in
bed — the first
one caused the most number of
deaths at 43 percent.
If I had it to do over again, I'd probably get
one of the super-duper fancy German models with three bars that unscrew in the middle to provide a safe exit for toddlers, because by the time le Petit was 20 months old he'd figured out how to vault himself over the side and scare me to
death (and yet would have NOTHING to do with a toddler
bed — he still seemed to want the sides).
For instance, as James J. McKenna noted in a 2005 piece from Paediatric Respiratory Reviews,
bed - sharing may only be
one factor involved in the case of SIDS
deaths, and that parents should not be turned away from the possibility of co-sleeping entirely.
Medical authorities and coroners are not usually forthcoming about the details associated with bedsharing
deaths, like if the infant was sleeping prone in the
bed, an independent risk factor for SIDS, for example, Indeed,
one former President of First Candle once called parents who bedshared guilty of «uneducated parenting» and suggested that parents bedshare because they think it is «cool».
Just make sure, as much as this is possible, that you would not assume that if the baby died, that either you or your spouse would think that
bed - sharing contributed to the
death, or that
one of your really suffocated (by accident) the infant.
Dave Taylor, a Boulder, Colo. father of three school - age kids, is
one of the growing number of people who ignored pediatricians» warnings against
bed - sharing as a way to reduce Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome, or SIDS.
Referrals to craniofacial centers for evaluation of deformational plagiocephaly and brachycephaly are increasing.8 This increase in deformations has been temporally linked to the Back to Sleep program advanced by the American Academy of Pediatrics in 1992 that advises the avoidance of the prone sleeping position as a method of reducing the rates of sudden infant
death syndrome.10,, 12,13 There is a delay in early gross motor milestones in children forced to sleep supine but these delays seem transient and have not been linked as yet to any longer term problems.14 Children who are encouraged to sleep on their backs and develop abnormal head shapes as a result are a different population than children who spontaneously restricted their movement in
bed for
one reason or another.
Guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) advise caretakers to put infants to sleep on their backs and to avoid loose
bedding, soft sleeping surfaces and
bed sharing in order to reduce the risk of Sudden Infant
Death Syndrome (SIDS), the leading cause of death in children between one month and one year of
Death Syndrome (SIDS), the leading cause of
death in children between one month and one year of
death in children between
one month and
one year of age.
In 22.2 percent of cases,
one parent or both parents were sleeping in the same
bed as the child at the time of
death.
Since 2005, there have been 3 toddler
bed recalls totaling more than 1.2 million units and involving
one death.
Subsequently, by virtue of defining that an adult and infant are unable to safely sleep on the same surface together, such as what occurs during bedsharing, even when all known adverse bedsharing risk factors are absent and safe bedsharing practices involving breastfeeding mothers are followed, an infant that dies while sharing a sleeping surface with his / her mother is labeled a SUID, and not SIDS.26 In this way the infant
death statistics increasingly supplement the idea that bedsharing is inherently and always hazardous and lend credence, artificially, to the belief that under no circumstance can a mother, breastfeeding or not, safely care for, or protect her infant if asleep together in a
bed.27 The legitimacy of such a sweeping inference is highly problematic, we argue, in light of the fact that when careful and complete examination of
death scenes, the results revealed that 99 % of bedsharing
deaths could be explained by the presence of at least
one and usually multiple independent risk factors for SIDS such as maternal smoking, prone infant sleep, use of alcohol and / or drugs by the bedsharing adults.28 Moreover, this new ideology is especially troubling because it leads to condemnations of bedsharing parents that border on charges of being neglectful and / or abusive.
One study found an association of SIDS with heavy alcohol consumption in the 2 days before the
death.220 Although some studies have found a particularly strong association when alcohol consumption occurs in combination with
bed - sharing, 64, — , 66,221 other studies have not found interaction between
bed - sharing and alcohol to be significant.167, 222
No -
one on their
death bed wished they had spent more time working.
Large boulders like this
one wander across the flat clay surface of Racetrack Playa, a dry lake
bed in
Death Valley National Park in California, leaving long furrows but no hint of what propelled them.
Removing loose
bedding from a baby's sleeping environment is
one way to reduce their risk of suffocation and sudden infant
death syndrome (SIDS), write the researchers, who are from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
On my
death bed if given a choice of
one last thing to eat, it would be this
one from Zero George.
A final highlight for me was the little - noted Love Is the Perfect Crime, in which Arnaud and Jean - Marie Larrieu of all people successfully pull off a psychological thriller — admittedly an offbeat
one — about a student -
bedding lit professor (Mathieu Amalric) who may or may not be responsible for the
death of
one of his conquests.
The film that proves in a surprising number of ways the wellspring for Ron Shelton's similarly - dated Bull Durham from two years later (but don't hold that in its favour), it, like The Outsiders and Red Dawn, variously features a drive - in / moviehouse (this
one playing Slumber Party Massacre), rumbles, and noble
death's
bed vigils — and, like those flicks, Patrick Swayze in a key role as the old guy crashing the party, serving as mentor / older brother / Oedipal goat.
Not content with seducing Kim and trying to manoeuvre Steven into
bed with his mother (a briefly glimpsed Alicia Silverstone — excellent), Martin tells Steven what he must do: choose
one member of his family to kill by way of making amends for his dad's
death.
Despite Flash for mobile being on its
death bed, whispering its final goodbyes to the devices it once held so dear, it is getting
one last hurrah, courtesy of RIM, with Flash 11.1 arriving on the BlackBerry PlayBook following the latest over the air update.Flash... Read more
Despite Flash for mobile being on its
death bed, whispering its final goodbyes to the devices it once held so dear, it is getting
one last hurrah, courtesy of RIM, with Flash 11.1 arriving on the BlackBerry PlayBook following the latest over the air update.
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No
one will care how many houses you sold, how much money you made, or what awards you won when you're on your
death bed.