Parents are urged to develop an atmosphere of mutual respect; to communicate on levels of fun and recreation as well as on discipline and advice; to allow a child to learn «through natural consequences» — that is, by experiencing what happens when he dawdles in the morning and is permitted to experience the unpleasantness and embarrassment of being late to school; to encourage the child and spend time with him playing and learning (positively) rather than spending time lecturing and disciplining (negatively), since the child who is misbehaving is often merely craving attention and if he gets it in
pleasant, constructive ways, he will not demand it in antisocial ways; to avoid trying to
put the child in a mold of what the parent thinks he should do and be, or what other
people think he should do and be, rather than what his natural gifts and tendencies indicate; to take time to train the child in basic skills — to bake a cake, pound a nail, sketch or write or play a melody — including those things the parents know and do well and are interested in.
Each
person was
put in an fMRI machine and listened to a standardized set of 30
pleasant, 30 unpleasant and 30 emotionally neutral sounds (for example, a baby laughing, a woman screaming and a water bottle opening).
Consequently, Other
People comes across as merely
pleasant, the exceptions being two over-the-top sequences involving Justin (J.J. Totah)-- the flamboyant young brother of David's longtime friend, who
puts on a showstopping drag routine for his father's birthday celebration — and the astute recognition that true hell is soft - rock band Train's «Drops of Jupiter.»
Lovely well turned out
pleasant staff very clean hotel I think you should look at
putting plug sockets either side of the bed for
people to charge their phones etc