You don't have to give up the breastfeeding
relationship with your child just because you are unable to produce enough breast milk to breastfeed exclusively.
Not exact matches
One thing I've learned,
just from observing myself, observing my
relationship with my wife Lisa, observing my
relationship with my
children, and observing my
relationship with every other living creature... is that unity is...
The interview format used by the Oliner team had over 450 items and consisted of six main parts: a) characteristics of the family household in which respondents lived in their early years, including
relationships among family members; b) parental education, occupation, politics, and religiosity, as well as parental values, attitudes, and disciplinary approaches; c) respondent's childhood and adolescent years - education, religiosity, and friendship patterns, as well as self - described personality characteristics; d) the five - year period
just prior to the war — marital status, occupation, work colleagues, politics, religiosity, sense of community, and psychological closeness to various groups of people; if married, similar questions were asked about the spouse; e) the immediate prewar and war years, including employment, attitudes toward Nazis, whether Jews lived in the neighborhood, and awareness of Nazi intentions toward Jews; all were asked to describe their wartime lives and activities, whom they helped, and organizations they belonged to; f) the years after the war, including the present — relations
with children and personal and community — helping activities in the last year; this section included forty - two personality items comprising four psychological scales.
Part of the shocking revelation that Jesus brought us is that God doesn't
just want us to go to a happy, peaceful place, but that he's inviting us to enter into a familial
relationship with Him and as His
children we will live
with Him, do things
with Him and and work
with Him (and consequentially each other, forming a body that is One).
It is the responsibility of the father, he maintains, to strengthen the
child for the encounter
with reality, including the reality of evil,
just as it is Jesus's
relationship with his Father that enables him to endure the cross.
As parents, we need to work to ensure our
children have a
relationship with Jesus, not
just a desire to be part of a loving community doing good.
One thing I've learned,
just from observing myself, observing my
relationship with my wife Lisa, observing my
relationship with my
children, and observing my
relationship with every other living creature... is that unity is not achieved through compatibility, but through love.
If she won't have a
child, adn the mand wants one, then maybe that
relationship has met its end, and he should find someone
with the same goals and beliefs (though I would say that if he
just leaves instead of staying to provide comfort and ensure that she is okay he is a coward, but people's beliefs do affect their actions).
I believe that
just as I grow in my
relationship with my wife and
children as I talk to them, I grow in my
relationship with God (and He
with me) as we talk in prayer.
Kenneth agree
with you totally its not
just adams and abrahams problem its us guys we give in to our wives to keep the peace we should learn that the best way is always Gods way not our way or mans way.That to me is the message behind the story.The issue is rather than taking on the burden of his wife Abraham should have taken it back to the Lord its in our weakness he strengthens us.In the end he did what any married man would have done in order to please his wife.We are no different we put our wives or
children church work before the Lord
just as he did and loo at the consequences that came from that decision the arab nations became a thporn in there side.In my mind we need to put him first always.When we please the Lord he will bless us and our
relationships when we do it our way there will be consequences.brentnz
Sunnyreina, a person who would treat his / her own
children that way is not someone you'd want to be in a
relationship with; that's
just cruel.
What is it
with men, when I was younger no one wanted anything serious because I was divorced
with children, by the time I was in my 30s no one wanted a serious
relationship then either because I was a promo model and they didn't like other men looking at me (the exception being creeps who did nt care about me they
just wanted a trophy wife or those who wanted «good breeding stock»), now my kids are grown and I have my own business no one wants anything serious because I'm «too old».
I'm
just getting to the point that I'm really enjoying my empty nest and the
relationship that I have
with my adult
children.
I also think a lot of people ignore signs that their
relationship is not strong enough to cope
with marriage, or they think getting married and having
children will make the
relationship stronger (or they
just want to have a wedding... but not the ensuing 50 years of marriage that follows), where as both should be a fitting accompaniment to an already strong
relationship.
Staying up
with a crying baby, working without sleep, changes in your
relationship with your mate, needing to earn more and still do your part at home, rarely having time for yourself, the demands of protecting, guiding, and being a role model to our
children - there are times you must dig deep for strength
just to get through.
But, they don't want a husband or even a
relationship — they
just want a baby, and someone to coparent the
child with.
Remember it's not
just about your
child and their needs, but also about the
relationship you have
with them and your own needs and circumstances.
There are steps you can take to have a healthier
relationship with your
child, and you're starting to take those steps
just by looking for information.
Actually, if you're considering weaning because you've had enough of your boob addicted toddler, saying «No» may
just prolong your breastfeeding
relationship with your
child and make breastfeeding more enjoyable for everyone in the long run.
Just as when we work
with your
child, we build a
relationship of compassion and empathy
with you.
Rather than try to change your
child's personality, you can help her stretch
just enough to discover the joys of
relationships with peers.
An open adoption is a
relationship not
just with your birth
child but
with the parents that you choose to parent him / her.
It's
just one more way that open adoption allows you to play an active role in the decision - making process and build a solid foundation for your future
relationship with your
child's adoptive parents and your
child.
Back during Adoption School, when being a mom was
just a theoretical concept (by the way, our agency was nothing like what's been described in this thread — it told us the benefits of open adoption to the
child and said we would eventually form our own
relationships with first parents, which it then left us to do), I did not embrace OA because the highly - paid social workers said it was proving to be better for the
child than shame and secrecy.
Just like every
relationship you have in your life, the one
with the person who is taking care of your
child is a very important one.
Right now my good enough is
just having a good
relationship with my
child.
I
just want us to consider the cost to our
relationship with our
child.
He is a person, he has needs, he is unique and we have a
relationship just as you have
with your
child.
The research noted that maintaining a healthy
relationship with your SO is
just as important as nurturing your
child the best way you can.
And
just as a mother's
relationship with her
child is influenced by birth practices, so is a father's or partner's.
«You're not
just getting the parenting advice you need to meet today's challenges, you're getting a
relationship with a brilliant woman who truly cares about you and your
children for years to come.
Translation: Our
relationships with our
children need a lot of specific TLC and one - on - one care, not
just what we have to spare when life is done taking up the rest of our time.
We know that spending
just a few minutes putting aside distractions and letting
children lead play can boost our
relationship with them, but that doesn't stop us running away from this...
These parents generally love their kids and do want to be attached to them, but
just don't necessarily realize that some of the things they are doing may be damaging to their
relationship with their
child.»
KRISTEN STRATTON: It kind of
just feel like a big blow to be honest at first I'm proud
with each of my kids but I think my first week I struggled
with our breastfeeding
relationship for multiple reasons but
with my second and third
child it didn't feel like something I had to force myself do like it
with me first.
It is so easy to stand back and
just support the
relationship between the mother and the
child, but it is crucial that we give ourselves the time to really bond
with our babies.
«They
just need a deeper understanding of
children's cognitive and emotional development, and how fluid that is, and how closely it may be tied to their
relationship with their teacher.»
And it would have saved me a lot of heart ache in
relationships, not
just intimate
relationships, but ones
with my parents and
children as well.
And, since our anniversary is tomorrow, we
just had Valentine's Day, and we're in the throes of adding another
child to our family, it's SO important for us to remember the core of our family... our
relationship with each other and our
relationship with Christ.
i am 5» 5 medium built attract widdowed 2
children at home and 2 grandchildren love the movies out to dinner walks on the beach i do smoke ciggerettes and drink socially havent been in a long term
relationship for 5 yrs now was engaged
just looking for that chemistry
with mutual attraction
am very outgoing, communicative, easy going, outspoken, I am also a very Romantic type, love to cuddle, hold hands while walking, I'm trustworthy so far as people tell me maybe I'm
just laid back, lol... I also tend to have a good heart
with so much of love to give and to receive.I am a lone
child as well.I love watching Movies, Television, listening to Music, Singing, Reading, Writing poems, Swimming, playing Basketball.I seek for a complete honest Woman, who will come home to me, love me, adore me, a strong Woman
with a strong heart who will want our
relationship to last forever, a compassionate Woman, one
with good heart and know how to handle matters, I want a lover not a fighter I've got two beautiful kids and still want to have more
If you
just ended a
relationship with someone your
children were attached to, such as their father, don't start dating someone right away.
Just as you should ease gradually into your
relationship with this woman, you should ease her, and your
children, gradually into each other's lives.
I
just recently got out of a 5 year
relationship with the father of my
children.
The benefit to this is that you are not
just connecting to a group of like minded people who are all looking for
relationships, but they also have an understanding of an added aspect of combining dating
with children.
Just as
with the courting couple, the parents of the dating couple should be involved in the
relationship, getting to know their
child's companion and being a source of wise and discerning advice and guidance for both of them.
Hi, I'm
just a
child of the King, who values her
relationship with God.
They wreck his apartment and ruin his career — but might
just save his
relationship with his
children and restore his marriage.
He now lives in the shadow of his daughter's step - father,
with his main goal in life to build a
relationship with Kim (Maggie Grace) like the one they shared when she was
just a young
child.
Interesting, too, is the inescapable idea that the only genuinely convincing
relationships in the film are homosexual, and that the picture could be read
with profit as an escalating evolution of father
relationships from low to positively Christian (mad steward Denethor and son Faramir, Frodo and Gollum, Gandalf and the hobbits, Aragorn and mankind)-- but part and parcel
with the oft - fascinating subtext and beautiful images is a parade of useless cameos (please, enough Cate Blanchett), de rigueur expository flashbacks, and the squandering of opportunities to locate the genuine interest in unlikely epic heroes (women and, essentially,
children), rather than
just pay lip service to them.