Sentences with phrase «what feels like home»

But even so, I try to stay true to myself and my general sense of what feels like home to me and my husband.
Seasoned travelers can take refuge in what feels like a home away from home set within a stunning environment.
Fiction is what feels like home to me.

Not exact matches

Years ago, my son Tim and I were waiting for a commuter train to take us home, from what felt like the middle of nowhere.
And I felt like: What am I — someone who came to the Bay Area for a tech job and is paid a lot — doing in this home instead of someone else who actually can't afford to pay more than $ 1,000 a month in rent?»
At the end of the day, sharing time with your roomies is what will make your apartment feel like a real home.
Case in point: they will remember what kind of pillow you prefer and make you feel like you just arrived home with their friendly service!
The biggest thing that I had to deal with was not feeling like God was mad at me every time I made any kind of a little mistake, because in the home that I grew up in you just never knew what was going to set my dad off.
He writes with feeling to a parent of the school, «I often think what poor creatures we priests are, who, like gentlemen of England, sit at home at ease, while you, married men, have all the merit of anxiety and toil which the care of a family involves.
I feel like i'm not «faithless» more so asking is heaven really what i always thought it was or is that something i was told soooooo many times i think its real; as the easter bunny, is it our loved ones, pets, we will all live in big homes no pain or sad feelings.
He thinks the reason may be what someone else here cited - that the rest of the environment in the U.S. has become highly integrated - schools, workplace, etc., and the church is the last bastion where they feel they can relax and everything seem like «old home week» — i.e. «family».
I feel like I'm telling a lie when I'm asked what I'm doing and I reply by» I'm a Stay - at - home - Mom to a 2 - year - old».
My family is Nicaraguan, but I grew up in Miami and know exactly what you mean about Cuban food feeling like home.
But like most recipes, I end up changing the recipe anyways based on what I have at home, what I feel like eating, and whether or not my kids will complain through the entire meal.
Despite living in what feels like the restaurant capital of the world, Tim and I eat dinner at home most nights.
Don't feel like you need to make a special trip to the grocery store for the apples though, what you have at home will be fine.
There may be a few rough edges, imprecise cuts, and crumbs sprinkled around the table, but that is what makes it feel like home.
To this day, it's still one of my great «kitchen sink» salads: What goes into it or how I dress it depends what I find left over from service the night before in the salad station, or what I find in my fridge at home when I don't feel like shopping or cooking mWhat goes into it or how I dress it depends what I find left over from service the night before in the salad station, or what I find in my fridge at home when I don't feel like shopping or cooking mwhat I find left over from service the night before in the salad station, or what I find in my fridge at home when I don't feel like shopping or cooking mwhat I find in my fridge at home when I don't feel like shopping or cooking much.
But, man, I tell you what... it just seems like by the time I get home from work, having dinner, and spending time with the family, the last thing I feel like doing is sitting in front of the computer writing a blog post.
Coming home after a whirlwind trip can often leave me feeling a little like what the heck!?
It doesn't necessarily feel like home, but they're friendly, I get a really good cup of coffee, and what I'd say is the best eclair in town.»
Over the last few years, I've returned home from what should have been dream escapes feeling worn out and chubby — like I needed a vacation to recover from my vacation.
i know what you mean about not ordering stuff you could make at home — i have felt that way about other native food's dishes, like their salads and their rice bowls.
I'm trying to imagine what your man Carvalho might look like beside Xhaka when he starts feeling at home, gets used to our pitch and surrounding then becomes confident.
What is also normal is developing other interests, playing with other groups of friends, spending family time at home or in the community, bopping from activity to activity when their interests move in another direction, and then coming back to an activity they dropped some time ago, when they feel like it.
And given what I've read and watched on the news since January... looks like his camp is the one: - giving him bad advice (not being with the team for home games / playoffs)- giving leaks out to the media on how Kawhi / their camp feels - wants him to leave SAS for a bigger media market to get a bigger shoe deal (screw the max deal with SAS)
Despite continued snipes in the media the stadium is fine; not perfect but it is what we have and is a place that we need to make feel like home.
The statistics show that home teams have an advantage, certainly home teams that score first... What we wanted to do today was to make sure we put them under pressure early, that they felt like, «Look, this is going to be a long afternoon.»
He did and now, following a season - opening performance of 6.63 in France at the end of last month — his first race since June — the 2014 world indoor champion has every intention of being in contention to find out what it feels like to win at a major championships in front of a home crowd in Birmingham in a few weeks» time.
@Gretchen, when you make a statement like «Would that all women had the resources and confidence to say this,» you transition from your reflection on your own thoughts and decisions and move to a blanket statement of what you think is Right for all women (the implication here is if women had the correct amount of resources and confidence, they would all feel like staying at home because they would be able to recognize that they were the most qualified to care for their kids.)
In part 2 of this two - part series, James discusses exactly what to do when your children get in trouble for fighting at school or at home — and the right kinds of consequences to give them so they learn to use appropriate behavior instead of lashing out when they feel like hitting someone the next time.
I had irrational fears about what it would be like at work, felt completely helpless on multiple occasions, and had a very hard time letting my son out of my sight even to run to the bathroom (when my husband was home).
If you feel like you know what's going to happen when you get home, then great!
We feel guilty because we know we are so lucky to be able to stay home with our kids but still don't love it at every moment and sometimes think about what it will be like when we return to our old jobs.
We have all been there and we know what it is like to feel at home all the time, but unsure how to take your son or daughter out though too when they are learning to potty train.
Sometimes I think that stay - at - home mothers like to think that because we have given up (what feels like) everything that our children will turn out better, will be smarter, will be more successful, will be healthier, more loved, more, more, more....
around midnight i began to question my decision to have a home birth, & maria was getting tired... she called in a second midwife for support & my doula arrived from another birth... i was afraid of the power - i hadn't felt it like this in kayenn's birth... i was afraid that i would come apart - even though i had to - i know now that coming apart is a part of the process... someplace in the middle of this birth i realized that i did not know how to do this - i was acting against the birth process - literally & emotionally... i had a mental idea of what it should look, sound, smell, be like... after some hours maria checked me again, i had been at 9 cm for 4 hours... she said to me, «some babies can come through at 9 cm, but yours will not, sokhna... sokhna, you are going to have to fight to bring this baby out... go into the bathroom, get in the shower & work it out... «so i did... i went in the cold bathroom alone & remembered every cold detail of kayenn's birth... i wondered if i could get to the hospital on time to have an emergency c - section & i began to cry... & as i cried i had to go to the bathroom - i sat on the toilet & the rushes came down like nothing i can explain - but they didn't hurt - it was just POWER!
And none of those things even come close to what it must feel like if you are home with your laboring wife, and an incompetent midwife and suddenly the midwife starts cursing and freaking out, and you can see from where you are standing something is wrong, the baby's feet are coming first, and too much blood, and your wife is screaming in agony and you can't remember how to dial 911.....
Someone who has never attended a peaceful home birth where the woman is completely focused on what she is feeling and is conscious to the fact that she is about to give life, will never understand how birth is not an sickness and that it should not be treated like so.
What do you feel like when you first bring a child home?
Sasha Miller Editor, BabyCenter United Kingdom Home: Alburgh, England (a small village in Norfolk) Children: Harvey, 8, and Nancy, 6 What I like best about being a mom: That swell of love I feel when I see them.
Once home, though, you might feel like you have no idea what you're doing!
What if you could visit a place close to home, but it feels like you're in an exotic location?
I cried several times knowing exactly what it feels like to sit in that doctor's waiting room, in front of his desk as he gives the news, in the MRI lab waiting for my child to emerge, and at home wondering when the symptoms will end and my child will be healed.
And if you're not familiar with home ed but feel duped by what you thought you knew, what other questions or beliefs would you like answered by those who do know, rather than those who speculate?
Your baby's pretty young but one of the things I think about I feel like there's some pressure on this is «What do you bring your baby home in from the hospital?»
If you want someone to come into the home and you want them to straighten up as well and perhaps you are not sure that you are working full time so you are around and there are times when you might wan na take your child and I often see parents get stuck in that dilemma, «Well, I have childcare today but I really wanted to be with my kid and now what I am not gonna pay them but yet they are feeling like they wan na be there.»
Andrea do you find that toddlers want to nurse more often when mom is at home just hanging out, and what tips do you have if the mom doesn't feel like being a twenty - four hour drive - thru?
After we got home, it was still rocky with his latch, there were many nights where I felt like giving up, wondering what kind of formula I needed to tell my husband to go out and buy.
Stacey Ferguson, Justice Fergie [«Cheer for Your Cheerleaders»] Kristin Shaw, Two Cannoli [«You Know Your Child Best»] Aviva Goldfarb, The Scramble [«Always the Potential for Good»] Margo Porras, Nacho Mama [«Your Kids Will Do What You Do»] Emily McKhann, The Motherhood [«You Are Courageous»] Jane Maynard, This Week for Dinner [«Savor Even the Hard Seconds»] Mary Ann Zoellner, producer at NBC's TODAY [«Play Like a Dad»] Lian Dolan, Oprah.com [«Life is Serious Enough»] Maria Bailey, Mom Talk Radio [«Take Time to Celebrate You»] Christie Matheson, Stroller Traffic [«Nothing Better Than Coming Home»] Carla Naumburg, Psychcentral.com [«You Are Not Your Thoughts»] Jenny Lee Sulpizio, JennyLeeSulpizio.com [«I'm Not Above Mom Jeans»] Kimberly Coleman, Foodie City Mom [«Follow Your Own Inner Voice»] Missy Stevens, Wonder, Friend [«Nice Things Are Still Just Things»] Rachel Jankovic, Femina Girls [«It's Not Supposed to Be Easy»] Megan Brooks, Texas Health Moms [«The Love Language of Listening»] Carissa Rogers, Good N Crazy [«Here's to Embracing Change»] Dina Freeman, BabyCenter [«Learn to Swim in the Deep End»] Elizabeth Grant Thomas, Elizabethgrantthomas.com [«It's Easier to See Light in Darkness»] Wendy Hilton, Hip Homeschool Moms [«They Want to Make Us Happy»] Renée Schuls - Jacobson, Rasjacobson.com [«Beware of Emotional Vampires»] Shannon Lell, ShannonLell.com [«Don't Be Afraid to Sparkle»] Bunmi Laditan, Honest Toddler [«What Makes You a Writer»] Erin Dymoski, Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms [«What I'd Tell My Younger Self»] Lyss Stern, Divamoms.com [«Those Who Matter Don't Mind»] Debra Shigley, In Deb's Kitchen [«Feeling Bad?
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