Sentences with phrase «whose emotional age»

Society, thanks to a shy, awkward man - child named James Halliday (Mark Rylance) whose emotional age was frozen in the 1980s, has designed a Universe that rivals anything to be had on reality - based Earth.

Not exact matches

Sundance Canyon Academy is a licensed, residential treatment program that utilizes a highly specialized, therapeutic approach in treating young men, ages 13 - 17 years old, whose lives are jeopardized by emotional and behavioral issues.
The study found that young children whose parents offered them food for comfort at ages 4 and 6 had more emotional eating at ages 8 and 10.
A similar study in the U.K. found that children whose fathers experienced postpartum depression were roughly twice as likely as their peers to display emotional or behavioral problems (such as hyperactivity) at age 3, even when the mother's history of depression was taken into account.
«As a yoga teacher of 37 years, whose chronological age (almost 70) belies his emotional age (on the best of days about 13), I found Ira's book enormously helpful in suggesting a number of simple ways that I might finally learn to act my actual age.
Joaquin Phoenix plays Theodore Twombly, a middle - aged man who lives alone in an apartment overlooking a skyline of skyscrapers (the film was partly shot in Shanghai) and whose day job involves writing emotional handwritten letters on behalf of strangers.
Teresa Barker is a veteran journalist and book writer, whose collaborations include the New York Times bestseller The Big Disconnect: Protecting Childhood and Family Relationships in the Digital Age, with Catherine Steiner - Adair, EdD (HarperCollins 2013), Raising Cain: Protecting the Emotional Lives of Boys (Ballantine 1999) with Michael G. Thompson, Ph.D., and Dan Kindlon, Ph.D.; In the Moment: Celebrating the Everyday, a Literary Guild Holiday Featured Selection with Harvey L. Rich, MD (HarperCollins 2002); Girls Will Be Girls: Raising Confident, Courageous Daughters, a USA Today Top Summer Reading choice, with JoAnn Deak, Ph.D. (Hyperion 2002); Speaking of Boys: Answers to the Most - Asked Questions About Raising Boys (Ballantine 2000) by Michael G. Thompson, Ph.D.; The Creative Age: Awakening Human Potential in the Second Half of Life (Avon 2000), by Gene Cohen, M.D., Ph.D., founding director of the national Center on Aging, and The Mother - Daughter Book Club: How Ten Busy Mothers and Daughters Came Together to Talk, Laugh and Learn Through Their Love of Reading (HarperCollins 1997) by Shireen Dodson, former assistant director of the Smithsonian Institution's Center for African American History.
Dallas is one of approximately 20 horses at the residential treatment facility whose job is to work with the boys, ages 11 - 18 years, who have emotional and behavioral problems.
The writers urge the UK government to take action: first, by implementing a special, well - funded kindergarten stage for children ages 3 to 7 (when public school begins in the UK), whose focus would be on social and emotional development and outdoor play.
Three studies that explored symptoms of emotional disorders found that these were higher in children of parents with BPD compared with control groups: Barnow et al compared children aged 11 — 18 years of mothers with BPD with children of mothers with depression, and mothers with other personality disorders, and found the children of mothers with BPD to have signs of higher levels of emotional disorder and of suicidal ideation.21 Indeed, 9 % of children whose mothers had BPD had already attempted suicide, compared with 2 % of children of healthy mothers.
Disadvantaged children tend to fall behind before their second birthday: Children whose families lack economic and educational resources — those who are in the lowest socio - economic group, who live in poverty, whose parents have less education, or whose mothers are not employed — tend to lag behind their peers who have more of these resources in developing language skills, early math, and social - emotional indicators by age 2.
Ms. Davillier is the Co-Director and Curriculum Coordinator for the University of Massachusetts, Boston, Infant - Parent Mental Health Fellowship Program, a nationally acclaimed two - year intensive interdisciplinary fellowship for licensed professionals whose mandate it is to treat the social, emotional and relational derailments that can arise in families with children ages birth to five years.
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