Sentences with phrase «parents hostage»

If Educators were really part of the change as you suggest then they would forgo their Teachers Unions which for the most part is used to power play politicians and to hold parents hostage.
She believes kids deserve to eat a variety of real foods without holding parents hostage to the kitchen.
She believes families deserve to eat a variety of real foods without holding parents hostage to the kitchen.

Not exact matches

It's easy to postulate that homeschooling parents are unusually committed, but these results still challenge the prevailing orthodoxy that societal problems inevitably hold education hostage.
Following the service, the parents of James Foley released details of a letter James had dictated to a fellow hostage who was due to be released.
Who have to negotiate with little terrors that hold their parents emotionally hostage.
There may be one or two tables with parents who understand what it's like to have a screaming toddler holding you hostage at a restaurant, but the rest of the tables will be staring you down in an effort to get you to do something about your child's behavior.
Because how can it be that so many parents are also held hostage by their toddlers manias (of eating only butter, or walking only on one side of the staircase or you name it)?
KINGSTON, N.Y. >> School district Superintendent Paul Padalino says his decision to issue a shelter - in - place for students during a tornado warning Tuesday was correct despite complaints from some parents of students that their children were being held hostage at the end of the school day.
He is, tragically, the victim of a growing proclivity of the Chinese government to use children of rights lawyers and activists as hostages to press their parents.
A hostage to the escalating conflict between his parents, Julien is pushed to the edge to prevent
A hostage to the escalating conflict between his parents, Julien is pushed to the edge to prevent the worst from happening.
With a busload of kidnapped high school students, a flock of powerful parents and a smattering of high - caliber stars, NBC's «Crisis,» which premieres Sunday, seems prepared to do what CBS couldn't with «Hostages» — create a high - octane, character - driven...
It might have seemed fresher 10 years ago, before this kind of ironic labyrinthine plotting became common, but he has a sharp eye for characters and introduces Sally's parents (Shelley Duvall and Lanny Flaherty) during an apparent fast - food hostage crisis that dissolves into a marital spat before our eyes.
Conservative parents who've been held hostage by unethical teachers bent on retaliation and ugly tactics should suffer in silence no more.
When her husband suddenly required a costly surgery, the couple moved back in with Lockwood's parents in Kansas City, secular hostages in a Catholic rectory.
When this is present, the child is held hostage not only by a fear of abandonment from displeasing the alienating parent, but also by a feeling of guilt if they do not take care of them emotionally....
With the threat of exile hanging over their kids, parents often feel that they are held hostage to the peer group, unable to report to other parents something they have learned about a child's friend that he or she is anorexic, using drugs, drinking, etc..
However, while the child is in the parental care of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent, the child is in a psychological hostage situation and does not have permission from the hostage taker to form an affectionally bonded relationship with the beloved but rejected targeted parent, and the child is instead required by the hostage taker to actively reject the beloved other parent (see «The Hostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildreshostage situation and does not have permission from the hostage taker to form an affectionally bonded relationship with the beloved but rejected targeted parent, and the child is instead required by the hostage taker to actively reject the beloved other parent (see «The Hostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildreshostage taker to form an affectionally bonded relationship with the beloved but rejected targeted parent, and the child is instead required by the hostage taker to actively reject the beloved other parent (see «The Hostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildreshostage taker to actively reject the beloved other parent (see «The Hostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildresHostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildress.org).
The child has been held as a psychological hostage by a narcissistic / (borderline) parent (see «The Hostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildress.org), and in that context the child has had to completely surrender psychologically to the psychopathology of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent in order to shostage by a narcissistic / (borderline) parent (see «The Hostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildress.org), and in that context the child has had to completely surrender psychologically to the psychopathology of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent in order to sHostage Metaphor» article on my website; http://www.cachildress.org), and in that context the child has had to completely surrender psychologically to the psychopathology of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent in order to survive.
Research indicates that witnessing DV can involve a broad range of incidents including: hearing the violence, being used as a physical weapon, being forced to watch / participate in the assault, being informed that they are to blame for the violence, being used as a hostage, defending a parent, and / or having to intervene or stop the violence from occurring.
The results reported in Children Held Hostage, the American Bar Association sponsored study, supported a firmer approach to enforcing parent - child contact.
A child who denounces a loving parent, while under the influence of adults, resembles hostages who develop a bond with their abductors and prisoners of war who issue statements criticizing their country.
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