Answers
Most of the time parents try to make all the choices for the kids - what is good / what is bad.
In essence most parents themselves don't know what is good and what is bad.
Do parents have command over the kids becuase they are the money holders?
BTW,
I am 30 neither a parent / nor supported by a parent since 14 years. Just curious.
That's an interesting question . . . I think it's becuase of the enormous investment in money, energy, time, emotion, etc. Parents don't want to see their kid "screw up" becuase they want to see their "investment" payoff. By that I mean they want to see their kid become happy, educated, successful, etc. That doesn't mean that parents know what their doing, but it does mean that right or wrong, they typically do try.
But there's another theory that claims that we're just animals that instictively take care of children because we want to pass on our genes to the next generation.
This is a very basic first day in the game quot;Survival Kidsquot; for the Game Boy Color. Lost in Blue is the sequel to this game for the DS.
I'm going into middle school this year at East Bank Middle School and I'm kinda' nervous about it kinda',any tips for surviving middle school?
Going into sixth grade is a cool thing - you are out of grade school and into middle school! Good job.
You will see old friends and make new ones. Your friends will help you survive the transition into a different school and grade. Most of them will be a little nervous about it too. (whether or not they admit it.)
Keep doing the schoolwork and get good grades. You may have more homework to do in Middle School so be sure to allow enough time at home to get it done before watching TV or anything else you would rather do. Or if you have a free study period in school, that would be a great time to get some of your homework done. Concentrating on your schoolwork and assignments now will help you later on when you are in high school. That time will get here sooner than you realize.
But above all, enjoy the change and the challenge! (And enjoy your summer)
Best wishes.
Arranged marriages rarely end in divorce. Kids can switch who they're dating rather quickly. I don't think its a fair comparison though. Perhaps arranged marriages verses marriages formed due to love might be a better comparison.
Arranged marriages often link two people who where brought up with similar values and status. In short, they'll have a good chance of being able to get along and get through fights because they'll reason similarly.
Kids that date tend to like people dissimilar to themselves. They have the idea that opposites attract, when psychology shows us this is almost never true in the long run. Also, when they stop loving each other, which is what the marriage was founded on, they're likely to get a divorce. Arranged marriages are based on other things which tend to not dissolve as quickly. I'm not saying all love dissolves, just that most marriages in the US are based on the idea of love and over half of them end in divorce.
FOR KIDS
I have the book of survival
Probably the best wilderness survival book is the Boy Scout handbook followed by the Boy Scout Fieldbook. Those will cover all the necessary skills for basic survival.
The problem states that in Pakistan almost 50% of marriages are between related parents. It was found that 21% of children die before the age of 10 when the parents are related. And 16% of children die before the age of 10 when the parents are not related. From that the question is what is the probability of survival? I have the answer from the book it is 0.815, what i need to know is how to get the answer.
Okay, so you have
.5x + .5y = .815
where x=percent of surviving children of related parents and y=percent of surviving children on nonrelated parents.
x = .10 - .21=.79
y = .1 - .16=.84
.5(.79) + .5(.84) = .395 + .42 = .815
by the way, I say .5, because it said 50% were related parent marriages and 50% were nonrelated parent marriage
Buy Cheap
Susan Senator: Susan#39;s Blog: Excerpt Three from AMSG (Autism Mom#39;s ...
With our son with autism, I started "floortiming" - and it was energy intensive for sure. But I was absolutely astounded to find that it took almost no extra effort to engage him in symbolic play (feeding real grapes to a stuffed-animal pal). Sure, he did the same things over and over - and breaking patterns was tough - but well worth the hard work.





Mustang Survival MV1114-Mustang LiL Sport Neoprene Vest - Child 30-50lbs - Yell
Mustang Survival MV1104-Mustang Lil Mate Child Vest - Green - Kit
Kids Travel: A Backseat Survival Kit
A Child Called "It": One Childs Courage to Survive by Dave Pelzer
Zimbabwe-MNH - 1987 U N Child Survival Campaign - 2 blocks of four