Sentences with phrase «worried about fathers»

Nobody worried about fathers because everybody assumed mothers were the source of most problems in children.
Maybe I worried about my father being alone out in the world.
Also, I was worried about your father.
Call us and let's get Abrazo's attorney to explain, if you're worried about the father's rights, but the short answer is that mothers who feel adoption is best can usually make this choice without the father's involvement (except in very specific circumstances.)

Not exact matches

I would love to move to a state with enough land and a warmer climate for my sons to ride their race bikes, my daughter to have the horse she dreams of and me to finally be at peace, I also believe that there should be someone home with the kids no matter what their ages are and as a single Mom with no family support or father involvement being at home for me is even more important, especially now that they are teenagers, There are no more nap times or time outs and the things you worry about during this age are so much more dangerous than falling down and hitting their heads as toddlers.
It stars Watson as Mae, a digital babe - in - the - woods worried about her ailing father (Paxton) and her off - the - digital - grid platonic love interest Mercer (Ellar Coltrane, from Boyhood).
Children not among the targeted audience: those who worry about having enough food to last through the weekend, those who wonder why their father is no longer at home, and those who must learn to avoid neighborhood violence.
Jay goes on to mourn the lost of his father to liver disease, and recalls worrying about how to get his mother out of poverty.
We should not worry about worldly concerns because our Father the King is watching out for us.
Both sons are prodicals what God is teaching us through the parable is revealing the intents of our hearts there sinful.The younger son wanted the worldly pleasures that was where his heart was at at least he is honest.The older brothers heart was no better because it was all about him it wasnt out of love for his father that he stayed on the farm but that by his works he would gain all that his father had.If he loved his father he would have known how his father would have responded to his brother and he himself would also have been happy to have seen his brother alive again.In the back of his mind he is worried that he may lose more of his inheritance and feels threatened and that is why he responds in the way he does.His heart hasnt changed at all even though his brother has come back from the dead.
To see this man so worried about his wife and unborn child, just like any other Christian or Jewish father / husband made me come to terms with my own misconceptions..
The preacher is right everyone should be who they are... but then again the Bible does state that it is an abomination to God... But get this... before God can judge you Jesus has to judge you... the BIble says NO MAN COME TO THE FATHER BUT BY ME... we have no room to judge others or talk about them because no sin is big or small they are all the same... the only big sin is not being saved and believing in God... if we are saved and if we believe we have nothing to worry about... but again we have no room to say who is right and who is wrong because it's not our place all that we can do is pray and prayer can change things...
Tessa (Jane Levy, Shameless) is being raised by her single father, George (Jeremy Sisto, Law & Order), who is worried about her circle of influence in new York City — so he packs up and moves the small family to the suburbs.
So you're worried about what someone's ancestor did back 3 generations ago but no one can bring Obama's own father and his marriage practices?
WORRIES ABOUT THE MENTAL CAPACITY ACT GUIDE Dear Father Editor, Might I encourage a careful review of the «Practical Guide» to the Mental Capacity Act recently published by the Catholic Bishops» Conference through the CTS.
Tommy works alongside both father and mother, sharing warmth and chores and conversation; he is the opposite of the «hurried child» that David Elkind worries so about.
It is important to me that we eat this way since my father in law died several years ago from cancer I worry about my husband's genetic predisposition.
Now we decorate a for - reals tree while my father complains about falling needles and worries about the tree bursting into flames.
Experts are saying older men shouldn't worry about their higher risk of fathering a child with bipolar disorder (men 45 + are 25x more likely than a man in his 20s to father a child with bipolar disorder) because it's such a rare disease but recent studies show it's not rare at all and affects 4 - 5 % of the population.
Other suggestions: spend some time alone with your baby just holding her and letting her fall asleep on your chest, which can be incredibly relaxing, talk to your wife even if you are concerned about upsetting her as you are a team, keep in mind that your anxiety is driven by your desire to be a good father - this you should be proud of and not feel guilty about, and read up on anxiety so you know what you are dealing with (my personal favorite is Dale Carnegie's How To Stop Worrying, a classic).
I just went from a father scared to death for one little boy, to having 25 new sons to worry about.
This autumn, fathers from one mosque, worried about local lads» progress, obtained their own funding — and approached YMCA Bradford to run a course for them.
Despite how far women have come, there remains a sort of unspoken belief that our daughters would be better off married than solo; at the recent wedding of his oldest daughter, one of three, the father of the bride repeatedly was told, «One down, two to go,» as if all his daughters will marry, all his daughters want to marry and — most important — he won't have to «worry» about that one.
You may be worried about not doing it right, hurting the child in any way or even whether you will be judged as an inadequate father if you make a mistake.
I was looking for a place that not only made me feel as if I were their caring for him myself but also a place where I did nt have to worry or wonder about the type of care he was receiving while his father and I were at work — what I found with Lucy Hernandez at Lucy's Daycare was so much more.
He has worries about money, relationships, upheaval in life and his own adequacy and preparation to be a father.
All fathers worry about their partner's health and the development of their baby during pregnancy.
In a review of data gleaned from 2000 divorced couples covering almost 20 years, Professor Leopold's team uncovered a worrying fact about fathers.
Doulas can be your best friend, they can help you achieve your personal goals for birth and parenting, and can alleviate the stress from fathers during childbirth, as well as the mother's stress since she'll no doubt be worried about her partner.
The co-founders of Owlet, all of whom are young fathers, have learned firsthand what it is like to lose sleep worrying about their babies.
New fathers often worry about what to do with their babies.
Also, I would LOVE to hear what your hubby worries about as a father.
but where my wife gave birth the rooms were so crappy they should first improve them for the women themselves and then worry about making room for fathers.
Many first time mothers (and fathers) worry about every possible complication associated with childbirth and feel more at ease when they are in a hospital.
And now, worry about Sir Hubby and his father.
young athletic father of 2 looking for the right woman who i won't have to worry about supporting financially freeing me to provide 100 % of my attention to the better parts of the relationship.
His father (Paul Reiser) is unhappy about Andrew's growing obsession, and worries that drumming may not be the most promising career path.
Ryan Gosling is Holland March, a schlubby private investigator (and struggling single father) with a penchant for sleeping in the bath, whose client list includes bewildered old ladies worried about the whereabouts of their dead husbands.
Director Greg Mottola displays a good sense of balancing action and comedy during a chase through and around an abandoned warehouse, as Jeff becomes a frantic heap in the backseat, Karen worries about not having a seatbelt and tries to calm an argument between her sons over the phone, Natalie shows off her shooting skills, and Tim responds to it all like a frustrated father on a road trip that has gone on for too long.
Lenny is worried about telling his father he is a vegetarian.
If you're worried about having trouble following a convoluted plot, fear not, for Anthony Hopkins (Thor's father, Odin) opens the movie with an exposition - laden voiceover, making all clear (not really).
Late in the movie, Alton says that he doesn't want his father to worry about him.
He worries about losing territory to the more successful salesman Clancy Brown, and he worries that his father is ashamed of him because his sons have shown no interest in carrying on the family business, and he worries that some of his financial improprieties and sexual indiscretions will be found out.
Why is she worried about disappointing her father?
They plot a solution to their financial problems while Belle worries about her bedridden father.
She worries about the future for her teenage son, Falcon, hoping he will choose college instead of following his father into the family's septic - tank business.
While his father worries about losing his job at the local newspaper, Dave guiltily fixates on the special baseball glove that he knows is out of the question this Christmas.
Adams's life story encapsulates the history of the founding era, for she defined herself in relation to the people she loved or hated (she was never neutral): her mother, whom she considered terribly overprotective; Benjamin Franklin, who schemed to clip her husband's wings; her sisters, whose dependence upon Abigail's charity strained the family bond; James Lovell, her husband's bawdy congressional colleague, who peppered her with innuendo about John's «rigid patriotism»; her financially naïve husband (Abigail earned money in ways the president considered unsavory, took risks that he wished to avoid — and made him a rich man); Phoebe Abdee, her father's former slave, who lived free in an Adams property but defied Abigail's prohibition against sheltering others even more desperate than herself; and her son John Quincy, who worried her with his tendency to «study out of spight» but who fueled her pride by following his father into public service, rising to the presidency after her death.
Tommy had worried a good deal about his children at the time of the fire; they had gone from having their home be a place that class trips came to — each year in spring the fifth - grade class from Carlisle would make a day of it, eating their lunches out beside the barns on the wooden tables there, then tromping through the barns watching the men milking the cows, the white foamy stuff going up and over them in the clear plastic pipes — to having to see their father as the man who pushed the broom over the «magic dust» that got tossed over the throw - up of some kid who had been sick in the hallways, Tommy wearing his gray pants and a white shirt that had Tommy stitched on it in red.
If she had been traveling alone, Maya might have felt trapped and uncomfortable, but there was nothing to worry about because Father was with her.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z