Shall one bow his head for silent grace
when eating in public?
Be careful to know the table manners; this is applicable not only
when you eat in public but for every situation.
Not exact matches
I am empathetic with mothers who can not breast feed, but that doesn't mean we should forget how difficult it is for mothers who breast feed — glared at
when public feeding, condemned for feeding after one year, constantly being asked if they are «supplementing with formula», having to pump, having to watch what they
eat, not being able to go out for drinks, being up
in the night, and, like your comment, judged for breast feeding as a form of soothing.
Most of the time
when I was nursing
in public, I doubt anyone but a mother who had also breastfed knew what I was doing — I often had people ask if they could see the baby, totally unaware that she was
eating at the time.
Anyone who read last December's New York Times report on beef processing might understandably shudder
when watching a child
eat a hamburger
in a
public school lunch room.
By the way, this idea that advice to
eat less red meat is some sort of conspiracy relating to politics is rather laughable since, as Marion Nestle brilliantly explains
in Food Politics, the national beef association threw a major hissy fit
when Dietary Guidelines originally urged the
public to simply «consume less red meat».
Babies should still be able to freely
eat when and where they need too, but not at an openly naked breast
in public.
I feel like often
when you're out
in public with babies, people like
when they hear a baby cry — they would be like, «That baby needs to
eat.
And
when people tell us to stop, to take it to the bathroom, those people need to be called out
in order to educate the rest of the
public who have this same kind of warped view of a child
eating.
When the school lunch program was institutionalized across the country
in 1946, Congress voted 9 cents for every child
in the country
eating school lunch, according to Victoria Leonard, director of Children «s Nutrition for the Center for Science and
Public Interest, a Washington - based consumer activist group.
My first kind of experience of nursing
in public and feeling kind of confident was
when I had gone out with all the other mamas from my birthing class and we went to bubble park and you know we were there for the whole day so all of us just you know and every time a baby sees another baby
eating is like they want to
eat to so.
Parents who directly and actively engage their children
in healthy living behaviour — instead of passively «supporting» the behaviour — are significantly more likely to see their kids meet Canadian guidelines
when it comes to physical activity, healthy
eating and screen time, new research from
Public Health Ontario (PHO) has found.
-- Annette Powers, Brooklyn, N.Y. Valerie:
When I do go out and
eat in public, its very funny.
There's a famous study, I don't know if you've seen it, I use it
in every
public lecture by Robert Volvo University of Maryland cardiologist awhile back, fifteen years, an Egg McMuffin consumed by a healthy person and you want to measure endothelial function artery function, within one hour you had a dramatic drop
in healthy arteries
when you
eat one fast food hamburger.
What's the point of going out to
eat in public when you can
eat in privacy (and with the choice of not wearing jeans)?
The soap suds bubble through clearer than ever, the laughably melodramatic twists
in the plot, the car chase, the conspicuous consumption of E.L. James's novels — who knew «If you write it, you will eventually own it,
when the
public eats this soft - core swill up.»
Inviting the
public to take part
in the construction of the «Hunger Wall», various people give their reactions to the work with one elderly lady recalling a time during the depression
when she had to
eat bread baked from the flour usually fed to animals.
But Lepofsky, who is blind, says Ontarians with disabilities still face too many barriers
when they try to get a job, ride
public transit, get an education, use the health care system, buy goods and services or
eat in restaurants.
As expected,
when compared with participants living with others, those living alone were more likely to report (any) depressive symptoms
when living
in neighbourhoods with poorer access to civic / institutional destinations, retail, food /
eating outlets,
public transport stops and health clinics / services, lower levels of crowdedness and fewer people on the streets (table 4).
People say that I'm pretty, but I don't believe them... I like it
when guys look at me... because it makes me feel better about myself... I know I'm not fat, but I just forget to
eat sometimes, especially
in public... I feel like people are staring at me and not
in a good way...
Professor Eboni Baugh at the University of Florida offers the following example of an I statement: «
When we go out to eat, you always embarrass me,» becomes «I feel hurt and ashamed when you make fun of me in public.&ra
When we go out to
eat, you always embarrass me,» becomes «I feel hurt and ashamed
when you make fun of me in public.&ra
when you make fun of me
in public.»