Sentences with phrase «waking hours off»

Not exact matches

We share the same wake - up time, but due to my inability to turn off reality show satire UnREAL the night before, I hit snooze for an extra half - hour.
In addition, the survey also showed that the average U.S. office worker thinks about work for 78 percent of their waking hours during a typical workday, versus 41 percent on a day off.
Most people wait a while after they wake up to start eating; for me, it's easier to hold off for a few hours in the morning than it is to go, say, from 3 or 4 p.m. until bedtime without eating.
After all, when I can't do everything I need to during my waking hours, at least my brain is trying to get something accomplished in the off - hours.
A solid friendship at 18 might look like late - night study groups and spending every waking hour together; at 30, married and maybe with kids, it might mean the occasional dinner, text or almost quarterly run - ins where you pick up where you left off (hopefully).
We've been sleeping more than usual (I actually went to bed with Matthew at 7 pm earlier this week, waking only long enough to scarf down a tiny bowl of pasta for dinner before drifting off to la - la - land again), eating our collective weight in local ice cream, and touring small, nearby towns in the afternoons before heading back to the cottage for happy hour snack time.
We woke up and raced downstairs over an hour before the Saturday morning cartoons began, and we impatiently bounced off our bedroom walls while waiting for the 6 am «release time» on Christmas morning.
This morning I woke early (for me — I realize plenty of people get up hours before I do) at 6 am and drove a friend's son who is thru - hiking the Appalachian Trail from his off - day hotel to the trail up to McAfee's.
I wake up all hours off the morning to watch the games live and it kills me to see this happen to this once great club.
In other news, our team seems to be rounding nicely into form, with a productive off - season and several new additions already settling in, there seems to be a renewed sense of confidence in the air... our well - oiled machine has conducted business again early this year, so we can just sit back, kick our feet up and watch all those other suckers scramble to make panic moves in the 11th hour... of course, we need to tie up a few loose ends but our team of savvy negotiators, under the tutelage of our faithful leader, will perform their usual magic with ample time to spare... I have to laugh when I look around the soccer world and see all those teams look upon us with envy and scorn as they struggle to mimic our seemingly infallible business model... thank goodness the powers that be had the foresight and fortitude to resist the temptations of the modern football era... instead of listening to all the experts and simply taking the easy way out by making the necessary improvements on the field and in the front office, we chose the path never traveled... we are truly pioneers in our field... sometimes you just have to have faith in the people that have always conducted themselves in a respectful and honest fashion... most fans aren't so fortunate, they will never know what it's like to follow a team that treats everyone in and around the club as if they were an extended member of the family... all for one I say... so when you wake up this morning, please try not to gloat when you see rival fans pacing back and forth waiting for their respective teams to pull the usual panic buys, just say nothing and be thankful that it isn't you... like I've always said, this is why you stay the course... this is when the real benefits of having someone in charge for over 2 decades really pays off... have a great day fellow Gunners
When he was an infant he would often breastfeed with only half - hour intervals OFF, waking up as many as 10 times in the night.
I have a feeling the dream feed is disrupting her sleep and would like to continue weaning her off the dream feed but what if she continues to wake 3 hours after she goes to sleep?
I have tried for 4 nights in a row to let her CIO and she cries off and on for about an hour before settling down and then wakes again at 5:30 am so I feed her then.
The second zipper makes it convenient for changing diapers because un-swaddling will automatically wake the baby and the outcome could be hours off soothing to get the baby back to sleep.
The only time to be concerned that its not enough for a baby is if they start wanting to be fed every half hour, start waking up at night hungry again, or begin to go off their weight gain curve.
That seems so far off from him right now where he doesn't sleep longer than 3 hours at night without waking... My hubby and I are comfortable with CIO.
He woke about an hour or so later (I didn't completely empty myself when I pumped, just took the edge off so I could sleep).
I couldn't understand why he would nurse for (literally) hours, doze off, then wake up SCREAMING the minute I put him down.
A couple of hours ago he woke up from his sleep and insisted I take his pull off so he could pee.
She started off sleeping 2 - 3 hour then waking up crying for a bottle then going back down.
Sometimes it works but she wakes after half an hour and nothing seems to get her off.
Then our doctor noticed she was dropping off her growth curve, and I was suddenly asked to wake my soundly sleeping baby every two hours to breastfeed her.
They refused to sleep unless being held, woke around ten times a night and got up for the day around 4 a.m. My son was particularly difficult: he couldn't regulate himself when sleepy and would scream in my arms for up to an hour before finally drifting off.
He'd snooze for at most 4 or 5 hours, and then wake up every hour like clockwork, wanting to nurse but not wanting milk, popping on and off my breast and screaming in frustration.
It can be easy to get frustrated when your baby is constantly waking up at all hours of the day, especially if you're only taking a few weeks off from work.
I'm still pretty much going off of her cues for eating and sleeping at this point, except I wake her up during the day if it's been 4 hours since she ate last so she eats enough during the day and possibly stays awake enough to realize the difference between day and night.
Our fabulous pediatrician recommended that for two straight weeks, we wake up our son (who had been having night terrors on and off for over a year) a couple hours after he fell asleep.
Since newborns need to eat every two to three hours and their sleep - wake cycles are so chaotic, they frequently doze off at the end of a meal.
1) You get crowded out of your king - sized bed by your three - year old, your six - year old, your dog and your husband so you sneak off to the empty queen - sized bed in your daughter's room... only to wake up an hour later being crowded out by your three - year old, your six - year old and your dog while your husband sleeps alone in the king.
According to Dr. Richard Ferber, newborn babies spend much of their sleeping hours in deep, restorative sleep, which is why once your little one dozes off, it's difficult to wake them until they're ready to be changed or fed again.
For his second nap I tried a 1.5 hr waketime, and he fell asleep really fast with no crying at all, but then woke up 35 min in, and cried off and on (interspersed with playing) for a hour and only fell asleep right at the end of his nap!I let him sleep for 30 min and then fed him.
Is the fact that she is not in REM while eating sufficient or should I somehow strive for an even MORE awake baby??? As for question # 2: Anila's cycles are as follows: eat (and try to stay awake)- usually takes about 1/2 an hour or so wake - is or tries to be until 1.5 hours prior to next feeding sleep - 1.5 hours (but sometimes its only 1) I know that at the moment she can be on a 2 1/2 - 3 hour schedule but I not sure what to do if she gets up from her nap after an hour instead of 1 1/2 hours - should I feed her right away and then start the next cycle from there, throwing off the rest of the day's cycles??
Waking the baby wen is still asleep its piss me off because the baby need to rest she or he was playing the whole day and you wake him up.our elders saying when the baby is sleeping for such hours they growing as well.
You've nursed them since day one, grown to understand each one of their cries, have developed some sort of routine where waking up every hour to breastfeed only happens once or twice a week, and hey, not to mention time off from work and your husband waiting on you hand and foot.
Although soothing to baby during waking hours, pacifiers and other crib toys can block airways and should be removed from reach when baby drifts off to sleep.
It beats me why anything is off the table and yet it seems that there are many players in the UK spending all their waking hours trying to take things off the table.
And while we'll gain an extra hour of daylight in the evenings, we'll lose it in the morning — waking up, and maybe even heading off to work or school, before the sun comes up.
Alcohol can initially make you drowsy and help you nod off, but you might wake up within a few hours, and you'll probably get lower - quality sleep overall.
«If you are struggling to switch off or find yourself waking up at all hours of the night, you might want to ask your pharmacist about ways you can improve your sleep health.
So, while you might swear that a glass of wine helps you to drift effortlessly off to bed — and it may be true — it is equally true that the reason you wake up a few hours later is because the sedating effects wear off, and you are left with the aftermath of a body trying to get back into balance.
After nearly a decade of sleeping for no longer than two hours at a time, I can sleep for four hours straight and doze off again after I wake up.
Cortisol starts off low in that first initial bit of waking up, and really pops up in the first half - hour to one hour after waking.
I struggle to fall asleep, feeling very alert & heart rate very quik, normally an hour or more to drift off, and then when I do fall asleep, I awake around 4 am each night to go for a very lenghty urination, and then struggle to get back to sleep there - after, very restless and completely unrefreshed when I wake.
If you wake up an hour before your alarm goes off, try moving your bedtime a bit later; similarly, if you go to bed and find yourself lying awake, desperately trying to fall asleep for more than 20 minutes, you may be trying to go to sleep too early.
You're drinking coffee or caffeine to rev up and alcohol to slow down, which wears off and wakes you at wee hours in the morning, starting it all over again.
A day to unplug: The night I started feeling off was the same night my youngest daughter decided to wake up and stay awake for 3 - 4 hours.
So is that a good balance Breakfast off waking up, and than i will have later 3 hours or 4 hours later some Meat, Protein chicken or fish measure it cook in the oven.
I've slept for 6 hours max per night, and kept waking up, I couldn't get myself to feel excited for anything, especially not trainings, and last week, when I finally had some time off, and I came home, I got sick.
If you can hold off for a couple of hours without eating from the time you wake up, then you could do this:
She would wake up at 3 in the morning, go to her first job as a baker for a few hours, come home to send us off to school, sleep, greet us when we got back, then head out for her second job in retail for the rest of the night.
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