My heart also breaks for the people in my own country that don't have a roof over their head,
that sleep in cardboard boxes on the street, that can't remember the last time they had a meal.
My sister, for example,
slept in a cardboard box on the floor as an infant.
Even the BBC, which kicked off the baby box craze in 2013 when it published an article on the Finnish baby boxes, recently questioned whether babies who
sleep in cardboard boxes are safer.
As the BBC pointed out, Iceland, Japan and Luxembourg have the same or lower rates of infant mortality... and none of these countries have babies
sleeping in cardboard boxes.
I question the viability of a Catholic community which devotes any great energy to the question of ascending the throne while the born
sleep in cardboard boxes on the streets and the pre-born are ripped from their mothers» wombs to be discarded as surgical waste.
Many cats love to
sleep in cardboard boxes that are enclosed on all sides as this means that they only have one point of entry to keep a sleepy eye on, reducing their vulnerability.
I'm a sucker for vintage, blue, matching cups and saucers and wicker baskets that fit my cats, even though they only
sleep in cardboard boxes
Not exact matches
It's definitely worth considering if a simple intervention, such as a
cardboard box that doubles as a safe
sleeping environment, could help
in the U.S. And with the newest recommendations saying that parents should room - share, but not share a bed, with their babies, a baby
box makes following the guidelines very practical.
And some years later, homeless advocates
slept overnight
in cardboard boxes.
Many of my students thought of addicts as decrepit skid row bums who
slept on the streets
in cardboard boxes.
They also like to hide, crawl and
sleep inside enclosed spaces, so put a small
box with an entrance hole, a small never - used flower pot and tubes (
cardboard tubes from paper towels and toilet paper will do fine)
in the cage.
If you want to let your dog be a part of your family and
sleep in your bedroom, the first thing you need is a
cardboard box.
If your puppy is forced to sit
in his
cardboard box and urinate where he
sleeps, you will be setting yourself up for a lot of extra work.
Gerbils also like to hide, crawl and
sleep inside enclosed spaces, so put a small
box with an entrance hole, a medium - sized never - used flower pot or tubes (
cardboard tubes from paper towels and toilet paper will do fine)
in the cage.
And you should have them
sleep near you
in a crate or
cardboard box at night, with some bedding from where they were born if you can for a familiar feel and smell.
We've always put our puppies to
sleep in a crate night, though most times a strong
cardboard box the first few nights.
If your cats are anything like my grandmother's 7 felines (yes, 7) you'll probably relate to buying them a comfy new cat bed (which comes
in a
box), only for them to turn their noses up at the expensive bed and
sleep inside the
cardboard box instead.
He has cast himself
in wax as a homeless man — after a fusion with Sid Vicious and Elvis — and created high art / low art bronzed
sleeping and trash bags, not to mention a
cardboard box that you might just trip over.
And we are doing work
in Africa and Asia and even
in India, where my cofounder is located, there are people that
sleep on
cardboard boxes every night
in the street, but they have the phone right next to their heads, because that's their lifeline to figuring out where work is going to be the next day.