I even went so far as to judge other parents
whose kids slept in the «marriage beds.»
The one
whose kids sleep in her bed, the one who had two unmedicated births, on purpose, and I am also one of the moms who had a home birth.
Not exact matches
You said: My comment above on FB was prompted by friends
whose kid is SO entirely dependent on his parents to
sleep at night, that he is depriving them of their couple time and their desperately needed
sleep, and as a result, they are constantly frustrated, at odds with each other, and left feeling helpless and misunderstood and «joke» about divorce.
And for every
kid for whom CIO worked, there are an equal number
whose sleep got even worse because of CIO, or for whom it just didn't do anything.
By resetting your system and not eating sugar, often times, you'll find yourself
sleeping better at night... that is, unless you're a mother
whose two
kids wake up every hour (
sleep, what was that again?)
Giving a bottle to a toddler at bedtime and letting him fall asleep before you brush his teeth is an invitation to decay: I've worked with many families
whose children have developed cavities as young as 18 months because they consistently went to
sleep with milk on their teeth; likewise, I've seen
kids as old as 5 with cavities for the same reason: They were still taking a bottle before bed.
One - quarter to one - half of parents
whose kids have ADHD report
sleeping issues in their children.
In a study of 78 children
whose doctors had recommended tonsillectomies to treat
sleep - disordered breathing and 27 who were scheduled for other kinds of surgery, Chervin's group found that not only did the tonsil
kids have a higher incidence of ADHD than the control group but that a year after the surgery their behavior and concentration had significantly improved.
It's about a couple who adopts a
kid whose dreams become physically real while he
sleeps.