Posts Tagged ‘Hard Time’
Monday, March 1st, 2010
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For some women the thought of exercise during pregnancy is as appealing as a root canal without novacane. In their minds they have a nine month pass to keeping up with their gym routine. The first three months they are battling morning sickness and exhaustion. The next three months they are beginning to show. The last three months are so uncomfortable that walking ten feet to the bathroom is pure torture, so there is no way they will be able to walk on a treadmill for ten minutes. On the other side of the coin, there are some women who do not let something as little as creating a life stand in their way of exercise. These are the women we might see actually teaching a class at the gym, or speed walking throughout our neighborhood with their protruding bellies. Most of us however fall somewhere in the middle and that is just how their doctors like it. Exercise comes highly recommended when pregnant. Not only does it help control weight gain, but some women swear it helps with delivery also. There are some things to keep in mind in order to protect yourself and your growing little one. For starters you need to keep an eye on your heart rate as you are working out. Letting your heart rate rise to high could be dangerous to your little one especially in your first trimester. You want to maintain a steady heart rate and should do the talk test throughout your workout to make sure you are at a safe level. The talk test is when you talk during your workout. If you are having a hard time talking and wind up huffy and puffing more than getting out actual words, then you are working too hard and need to take it down. Most doctors recommend that you work at a pace where talking is challenging but still doable. Pregnancy is not the time to try out new exercise routines. This means that you should not try the new spinning class that your gym offers. Stick with the routine you have already been doing and that your body is use to. You may find that you have to make some modifications to some of your exercises as your pregnancy progresses. If you are a runner, a modified low impact jog through out your first trimester is fine but once you enter your second trimester and begin to show, your jog has to be brought down to a walk. For those of you who love sit ups, crunches and floor pushups, you can continue to do these up until you hit about 14 weeks or so. After that time period no floor exercises are recommending.If you do not have any sort of exercise routine in place before you get pregnant, this still does not give you a free pass. Almost every doctor will tell you that walking is a great exercise for any pregnant women who are not high risk. Walking at least thirty minutes, three times a week is a safe way for a pregnant woman to stay active.Walking is something you can do through out all three trimesters though you might find yourself moving at a slower pace by your third trimester. Another great plus to walking, especially as you approach your due date, is that walking can actually bring on labor. Many doctors will advise their patients to walk, walk and walk some more in the weeks leading up to their due dates to get things rolling. Some women who have walked throughout their entire pregnancy have an easier delivery and recovery period. The days of pregnant women kicking their feet up and not moving from the couch for nine months are days of the past. While strenuous exercise is a no no pregnancy is no longer a good excuse to stop moving.
Tags: Bellies, Control, Control Weight Gain, Creating A Life, Doctors, Due Dates, Exercise During Pregnancy, Exercise Pregnancy, Exercise Routines, Exhaustion, First Three Months, First Trimester, Gym Routine, Hard Time, Heart, Heart Rate, Lead, Love, Morning Sickness, Neighborhood, Nine Months, Novacane, Pregnancy, Pregnant, Pregnant Woman, Pregnant Women, Risk, Root Canal, Second Trimester, Starters, Steady Heart, Ten Feet, Third Trimester, Treadmill, Trimesters, Ups, Weight Gain, Workout
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Wednesday, February 17th, 2010
The traditional way to play hide and seek never gets old, but you may want a change if it is requested every day. Here are a few ways to play hide and seek with a twist while staying in the backyard.Have the kids pick out some toys that are not too small and are allowed outside. While they cover their eyes and count, you hide the toys around the yard. You can let them run loose and try to find them or play hot and cold if they are having a hard time. If the kids don
Tags: Different Ways, Hard Time, Hide And Seek, Hide Seek, Hot And Cold, Toys
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Sunday, February 14th, 2010
Constipation is a condition of improper bowel movement. Usually the child experiences pain and has a hard time passing dry and hard stool. In normal condition there is no pain while passing the stool and it has a soft texture. The bowel movement is also regular. A child having constipation not only finds it difficult to pass stool, but at times will feel the urge to pass and when he goes to the toilet, he cannot relive himself. The digestive system is responsible from the intake of the food to the smooth passage of waste. The food or fluids are consumed from the mouth, which heads towards the stomach via the food pipe. After the stomach treats the food with acid, it passes on to the small intestines and then to the large intestines, also known as bowels. The final stage of food digestion is the outlet through of the waste through the anus and rectum. During the whole processing, the body parts absorb nutrients and water from the food supplied to them. The left over matter comes out as waste. It is a myth among some people who say that an individual is constipated if he or she doesn
Tags: Anus, Body Parts, Bowel Movement, Bowels, Child Constipation, Child Experiences, Children Constipation, Constipation Children, Constipation In Children, Digestive System, Experiences, Flu, Food Digestion, Food Pipe, Hard Stool, Hard Time, Ina, Intestines, Large Intestines, Myth, Nutrients, People, Rectum, Small Intestines, Smooth Passage, Soft Texture, Stomach
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Sunday, January 24th, 2010
Parents and teachers need to recognize that private speech is a vital part of cognitive development children. The development and use of private speech is important to comprehend. As children gain control over their behavior, private speech do not occur frequently in its fully expanded form. Private speech or self talk occurs mostly when the individual involved has a hard time solving a problem at hand or is unfamiliar wit how to proceed with a dilemma. Self regulating through private speech plays a vital role in self control because children who learn this at an early age can benefit from self regulation by learning control.Researchers have noticed six varieties of private speech. Egocentric communication is what they call remarks that are directed to another individual that make no sense from the perspective of the listener. It could be just a statement of a fact which does not need any affirmation from either speaker or listener. Fantasy play is the kind of private speech that happens when a child plays a role and talks to inanimate objects or makes up sounds or speech for them. This could either be a dialogue or just the child talking to other inanimate objects which do not need any response.Emotional release private speech is self talk which has comments not directed to any particular listener that expresses feelings or those talks that seem to try to review emotions about past events. This kind of self talk usually occurs when the child or person feels an extreme feeling thus releasing emotions by saying how he feels out loud. Self-direction is the kind of self talk that occurs when a child describes the present situation he or she experiences for example is when he or she indicates directions and communicate these directions through words. Reading aloud can also be described as private speech when a child reads books or other materials out loud. This does not need response since the child or individual is just reading facts which he himself is assimilating but there is no apparent cause for intense thinking except for comprehension of what is being read. The last kind of private speech is inaudible mutterings and these are utterances which are said very quietly that they are indistinguishable to observers or listeners. This self talk is usually just letting out some ideas which may occur to the person and may have no need for solving.These different kinds of private speeches are similar but also different from each other. The more constructive kind of private speech is the self directed one wherein we encourage ourselves or guide ourselves in what to do when we encounter a difficult situation or obstacle. This is the self talk that helps us gain independence and confidence in things that we do because we know that we can solve problems or situations when they present themselves.Children sometimes leave out words and phrases of things that they already know about in a familiar situation. In their private speech, they only mention aspects that they are still unfamiliar with or may seem puzzling to them. When dealt with a familiar situation, the child does not need private speech to coach him or to guide him in what to do since he already knows what the situation may bring. The child soon begins to say lesser words out loud as he matures and may begin to review their thoughts internally. This means they are old enough not to need coaching from themselves or prodding to do something verbally. Private speech or self talk becomes silent inner speech during maturity period and becomes a meditation process in the long run.
Tags: Affirmation, Cognitive Development Children, Control Researchers, Dialogue, Dilemma, Emotional Release, Emotions, Feelings, Gain Control, Hard Time, Inanimate Objects, Listener, Parents And Teachers, Perspective, Private Speech, Reading Facts, Self Control, Self Direction, Self Regulation, Wit
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Friday, December 18th, 2009
There is a sleep disorder that affects between seven to ten percent of teenagers called Delayed Sleep Phase Disorder, also known as DNS. Most teenagers outgrow this disorder by the time they reach young adulthood. Less then one percent of adults are believed to have DSP. Often people mistake this sleep disorder for insomnia.Left on their own, people with delayed sleep phase disorder would stay up until very late, sometimes until 4 or 5 a.m. They like to get up very late in the morning or early afternoon. Often they are referred to as night owls.Many teenagers like to stay up late and sleep late in the morning. Sometimes this is because they want to socialize at that time of the day. However, it can also be due to the natural delay in the circadian sleep / wake rhythm at their age of development. Teenagers with this sleep disorder often have a very hard time getting up in the morning for school. Even if they go to sleep at a regular time, such as 11 p.m., they toss and turn for hours like someone with insomnia. They difference is, unlike an insomniac, people with delayed sleep phase disorder have no difficulty staying asleep. They do have a very difficult time getting up early in the morning. Teenagers with this sleep disorder are very tired during the day and may even fall asleep in the classroom. The exact cause of this sleep disorder is not known. It is known for certain that it is a circadian rhythm problem.Treatment for this sleep disorder is available for people that need to get onto a more traditional sleep / wake schedule. The types of treatment include, bright light, chronotherapy, melatonin and over- the-counter prescribed sleeping pills.Bright light treatment for delayed sleep phase disorder uses bright light to trick the brain’s circadian clock . Exposure to bright light shifts the circadian rhythm if it is administered within a few hours of the body’s lowest temperature at night.Using chronotherapy as a treatment for someone with delayed sleep phase disorder requires a block of time one week long. Each day bedtime is delayed by three hours successively. For example, for someone that falls asleep at 2 a.m. but wants to fall asleep at 11. p.m., their bedtime would move to 5 a.m. on the first day. The next day it would move to 8 a.m. and continue this cycle for a week. A teenager suffering with delayed sleep phase disorder would need a week off from school in order to complete this therapy. Once the desired bed time is reached it is very important to keep a consistent wake up time.There are several treatments involving various drugs that are used to treat delayed sleep phase disorder. Melatonin has been successful in changing the sleep cycle of people with this sleep disorder. Prescription medication such as Ramelteon, and other sleeping pills, have been successful in treating teenagers and adults with delayed sleep phase disorder.If your teenager has trouble falling asleep and always wants to stay up late, be aware of the possibility that a sleep disorder may be present.
Tags: Chronotherapy, Circadian Clock, Circadian Rhythm, Dsp, Early Afternoon, Exact Cause, Hard Time, Insomnia, Melatonin, Mistake, Night Owls, Owls, Phase Disorder, Rhythm Problem, Sleep, Sleep Disorder, Sleeping Pills, Teenagers, Time Of The Day, Young Adulthood
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Thursday, November 5th, 2009
This is probably by far one of the rarest forms of sleeping disorders around. This is an inherited disorder that has only been found in 28 families in the world that have the dominant gene for it. The offspring of a parent(s) of developing the disorder is about 50% and there is no cure for this. The age of onset is around the ages between 30 and 60 and the disorder’s time frame runs between 7 to 18 months. This disease has 4 stages that it goes through and 1st stage of the disease starts off with the sufferer dealing with increased insomnia leading to severe panic attacks, and various kinds of phobias, this stage lasts about 4 months, 2nd stage sufferer deals with hallucinations and panic attacks become more obvious and lasts about 5 months, 3rd stage Complete and total inability to sleep. And follows with drastic weight loss and lasts about 3 months, 4th stage Dementia sets in and progressively becoming irresponsive and mute over a course of 6 months and this is the final progression of the disease.This sounds a lot like Alzheimer’s because if you notice the time frame it’s a lot less shorter than the actual time span of someone who deals with Alzheimer’s because the sufferer is dealing with it for several years instead of a year where the disease progressively degenerates the mental capacity to such a degree that the sufferer has a hard time with memory.As far as treatment is concerned sleeping pills don’t have any effect for people suffering from Fatal Familial Insomnia and not even non-medicinal therapy doesn’t work either. Medical science has no idea why it’s a fatal disease and how they can create effective treatment options to combat this problem. And more effective genetic testing for diseases that are inherited to find out what can be done medicinally and therapeutically to deal with this sleeping disorder.It’s a matter of how much attention the medical world takes note of this and pushes the funding to finding a cure and effective genetic testing of families and tracking diseases through the generations to be able to have some kind of record of the disease passing down through generations or skipping generations which is what some diseases have done in some families for those who have a disposition for certain things.This doesn’t get nearly as much attention as all the other sleeping disorders because of it being rare, and only turning up in so many people and births making it not rare enough for it to get the recognition as regular insomnia and to qualify for the treatments. That are currently out there to help those 60 million people who are dealing with some kind of sleeping disorder(s).With the way medical science is going it will be a matter of time before medical science catches up and helps the many people who are looking for a cure of being deprived of a restful night’s sleep. The moment a cure is found is one more person who will be helped to have a good night’s rest.
Tags: 4 Months, 5 Months, Actual Time, Cognition, Dementia, Dominant Gene, Drastic Weight Loss, Ears, Fatal Familial Insomnia, Genetic Testing, Genetic Testing For Diseases, Hallucinations, Hard Time, Ina, Insomnia, Kinds Of Phobias, Lead, Lot, Many People, Medical Science, Medical World, Memory, Mom, Panic Attacks, People, Sle, Sleep, Sleeping Disorder, Sleeping Disorders, Sleeping Pills, Stage Dementia, Sufferer, Tent, Time Frame, Time Span, Treatment Options
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Sunday, October 18th, 2009
It is hard to believe that women do have a hard time eating healthy when they are expecting a visit from the stork. The sad truth is some women find it very hard. There is a trick though to remember how to eat throughout your pregnancy and it is as easy as ABC. Assortment is the first key. It’s been said that variety is the spice of life. Keeping your diet filled with assortment of fruits, vegetables and protein will help make sure that you and your baby don’t get too much of one nutrient and not enough of another. Eating a daily variety of healthy foods will give your growing baby and daily assortment of necessary nutrients. Balance is the next thing to keep in mind. We all know that balance and moderation is the key to any diet. There is no reason to deny yourself a bowl of ice cream but the whole container is over doing it. You want to keep all your meals as balanced as possible and make sure you are getting enough vitamins, whole grains and lean protein. Eating one and not the other is not going to help you or your baby in any way shape or form. Indulging in cravings is fine every now and then as long as you keep it in moderation, if you want a cookie, have one. If potato chips are your craving, have a few. It is when you eat the whole box of cookies and the whole bag of chips in one sitting that you might have a problem. The third key is color. You want to make your plate look as colorful as possible. Look at fresh fruit and veggies to paint your plate. The more colorful your plate is, the more appeasing it is going to look to your eyes. Have you ever noticed in magazines and cooking shows the dishes always look so tasty? This is because of the variety of color that are used in these dishes. You can get red strawberries and tomatoes to yellow peppers and squash. Pick your favorite colors and create your dishes based on that. Forget about dieting while you are pregnant. You and your baby need a steady supply of calories and nutrients through out the nine months of pregnancy and beyond. Pregnancy is one of the only times where a woman is expected to gain weight. Trying to prevent that weight gain can not only put you at risk, but also your baby at risk. You will have all the time in the world after your baby comes to lose the weight, but for nine months don’t even think about the word diet. If you find you that you are getting sick of the food you have been eating, then it’s time to start experimenting with different foods. Pregnancy is a time to expand your eating horizons as well as your waistbands. Plus with food aversions, you might find yourself turning green at some of your favorite foods and craving foods you never dreamed you would eat. You may find that the thought of pizza can send you running for the toilet, but place a dish of brussel sprouts in front of you and you are in heaven. Lastly, have fun with your food. Eating should be fun. Nothing will ruin your good habits faster than boredom. Add little touches like a dip for your veggies. Enjoy your food and try not to gulp it down. This will help avoid heartburn too! When you decide to treat yourself, leave the guilt at the door. After all, you are growing a person inside of you and decide a treat now and then for all your hard work.
Tags: Assortment, Daily Variety, Easy As Abc, Favorite Colors, Fresh Fruit, Fruit And Veggies, Fruits Vegetables, Hard Time, Healthy Foods, Lean Protein, Moderation, Necessary Nutrients, Potato Chips, Sad Truth, Spice Of Life, Stork, Strawberries, Variety Is The Spice Of Life, Whole Grains, Yellow Peppers
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