Sentences with phrase «parents worry about these days»

Not exact matches

What makes the strict rules these tech pioneers institute in their personal lives so alarming isn't the types of fears that drive them - nearly all parents worry about screen time these days - but the magnitude of that fear.
The things you worry about... ok my friend, you just need more wine and you won't worry as much I worry and all of parenting feels like blind stabs in the dark some days, but we're all just doing the best we can do and you're an amazing mama!
With summer almost over and dear old Golden Rule days upon us — in all its book - slinging, homework - bringing glory — parents have enough to worry about.
There's something to worry about at every single turn in parenting, I think, and then multiply it times five children and I could honestly worry about something all the live long day.
As parents we worry about the content that our children see from day - to - day.
Parents are many times worried about rear facing not being comfortable but to this day I have never heard a child complain about legs not being comfortable while rear facing.
My take away is the idea that at the end of the day it comes down to good parenting, and as parenting is a skill, parents who are worried about their kids being in childcare would benefit from taking classes (or using a parenting coach) to sharpen their skills.
Parents are often worried about this timing from both angles: they're eager to get there in time, considering traffic, weather, time of day, but they also fear arriving too early and being sent back home.
I don't plan on having the Santa stuff as part of our Christmas celebrations (and since we do things on a different day then other people, it would make it complicated anyways), but I worry about having to deal with other parents if my kid lets things slip.
This is a seat that is extremely easy to use and will be great for parents, grandparents, day care providers, and anyone who needs a seat that they can transfer from one vehicle to another and not have to worry about safety.
I hear this phrase almost every single day; from an exhausted mom of a 5 month old, wondering why her baby's sleep has gone downhill in the last month, to parents of a toddler who say that «their baby has never slept well since 4 months of age», or even from a mom of a 3 month old, worried about the upcoming «regression».
Don't worry about becoming parents (or parents again), about birth, about decorating the baby's room, about your health, about insurance — just relive the good ol' days and have some fun!
In a previous blog, we've talked about how parents can help their children prepare for the first day of camp, by helping them review their schedule, listening to their worries,
It's good nutritionally (I can relax about any «holes» in her nutrition, which is a common worry among parents of toddlers who will eat like birds one day and like pigs the next) as well as comfort / security / etc.
I have seen people on attachment parenting boards worried about what will happen if their baby is not worn all day at daycare.
Parents will be less stressed and stop worrying about the baby's condition all day long.
«In the last several days, people have become increasingly worried about the frail and the elderly back home, about parents and grandparents.»
I can't count how many times I've read articles this month about how great it is not having to worry about what presents to get, or whether you're at the present stage, or whose parents to visit on Christmas day...
Parents are so worried about their children's future these days that anything that departs from the traditional may seem dangerous.
As long as children continue with their own school's program, parents need not worry about transporting them across town during the middle of the day.
Parents are likely to have health and safety concerns, worries about cost, supervision and whether their children are capable of surviving without them for any number of days.
Her parents, looking to the day they would have to marry her off, worried openly about her overly assertive features.
I'm not a mommy, but I remember my own parents (many years ago) loving back - to - school time because a) they didn't have to pay for all - day childcare during the school year; and b) they knew we were occupied with constructive activities, and no longer needed to worry about any shenanigans we were getting into involving a neighborhood cat (well... at least until 3:30).
And, more recently, seeing the UK system up very close and personal during the illness and death of both my parents, I'd say that a socialized system allows everyone in the medical system, including the doctors, to see their patients as people first much more easily than medical professionals in the US, because they do not have to worry about a person's ability to pay, or for that matter have to spend their days embroiled in payment issues with insurance companies.
All teachers, principals and schools boards are worried about now in days in passing state mandating testing and how much money they can get parents to spend at the start of each school year on supplies.
As an added bonus, parents don't have to worry about recharging batteries every day or two, since e-readers will go for weeks on a charge.
Kids will enjoy expansive beaches to play all day on with much less traffic for parents to worry about.
Staying in a hotel makes the beginning of the holiday more exciting for the kids, more relaxing for parents and much much easier on departure day - none of the stress of worrying about missing your flights.
At Protective and Costco, we believe in a few fundamental parenting truths, which often have little to do with the things you worry about from day to day.
It is a natural tendency of all parents to start worrying about their Child's future the day he / she is born.
While the initial anxiety parents may face will take days to ease, the one condition you need not worry about are the hospitalization expenses during the delivery time if you or your spouse is covered under maternity insurance.
For some new parents, staying in their pyjamas all day only makes them feel worse, while others find that chilling out and not worrying about their appearance frees them up to put energy into other things.
To all parents doing this hard work and to grown - ups with sabotaging behaviors and worries about these Big Days ahead, I just love you.
Kids of our generation spent their days playing and yahooing in the streets, we wren't worried about spending «quality time» with our parents.
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