Jan
08
2013

Stroller Mom Lodges Complaint Against Bus Driver

It's No Cakewalk

Stroller Mom Lodges Complaint Against Bus Driver

It's hard enough for working moms to get out the door and get their child to day care on time. But for Jodi Christie of Toronto, insult was added to injury after a public bus driver criticized her stroller. 

According to an article in the Star, the trouble started when Christie met the bus at 6:40 a.m. She had to ask the driver to lower the ramp so she could board with her stroller. 

As she prepared to sit, the male driver allegedly told Christie she “should really get a smaller stroller that you can manage to lift onto the bus so that I don’t have to mess around with this stupid bull---- at 6:30 in the morning.”

He repeated the remark a second time, reportedly adding: “Where’s his dad? He should be helping you. If he even has a father.” 

Humiliated and angry, Christie filed an official complaint to the Toronto Transit Commission. She pointed out in the article that her stroller is one of the smallest on the market, not least of which that "my personal situation has nothing to do with me being able to ride the TTC freely.” 

Christie, who awaits a response from the TTC, stressed that it's no "cakewalk for parents trying to get around [the city] with their babies in tow."   

Agree? Have you ever faced pejorative comments from a public transit worker? Spill it. 

Jan
07
2013

Fans Cut Themselves for Bieber

I do it For my Justin

Fans Cut Themselves for Bieber

Update: Members of 4chan, an online message board known for “trolling,” took credit for creating the hoax urging Bieber fans to self-harm. According to an article in the National Post, members posted the following message: ”Tweet a bunch of pics of people cutting themselves and claim we did it because Bieber was smoking weed.” Hence the ensuing (fake) photos of slashed arms. Making a prank out of self-harming makes this story all the more disturbing... Thoughts?

A bad time for Justin Bieber just got worse. Not only was a paparazzi recently killed trying to cross the street after trying to get a photo of the megastar, but his fan base seem to have taken an insane pledge to get him to stop smoking dope. By cutting themselves.

It wasn't long before the #CuttingForBieber and #CutForBieber hashtags spread on Twitter, with disturbing pictures of bloodied arms of fans promising to stop cutting when he stops smoking marijuana.
 
"It hurts, but I do it for my Justin," tweeted one fan, according to an article in Hip Hop Wired, where a series of tweeted images were posted. 
 
Sources allege that Bieber had been pulled over by police when the photographer died, and that the photographer had proof of the star's pot habit. 
 
It's not clear whether the photographer's death and the ensuing media circus has fuelled Bieber's recreational drug use, but fans blame the bad influence of rapper and friend, Lil Twist. Fans want their clean-cut, sweet-faced Beeb back, and they'll clearly do whatever it takes to persuade him to stop.
 
Beyond disturbing. 
 
 
Jan
07
2013

Babies May Need to Cry it Out, Says Study

Resist the Urge to Respond Right Away

Babies May Need to Cry it Out, Says Study

It's one of those dilemmas that keep parents up at night. Your baby is wailing. Do you let them 'cry it out' or do you rush in to soothe them? And how long should you give it before you go in to them? Well, the jury has been out for some time. But now science claims to have the answer.

According to an article in Science Daily, a study published in Developmental Psychology maintains that the majority of infants be left to self-soothe and fall back to sleep on their own. 

"By six months of age, most babies sleep through the night, awakening their mothers only about once per week. However, not all children follow this pattern of development," said Temple psychology professor Marsha Weinraub.

In a study of more than 1,200 infants aged six to 36 months, Weinraub's team monitored sleep patterns at various stages by dividing babies into two groups: "sleepers and transitional sleepers."

"If you measure them while they are sleeping, all babies—like all adults—move through a sleep cycle every 1 1/2 to 2 hours where they wake up and then return to sleep," said Weinraub. "Some of them do cry and call out when they awaken, and that is called 'not sleeping through the night.'"

By six months of age, 66 percent of "sleepers" did not awaken, while 33 percent woke up every night of the week, and only twice a week by 24 months. More of the "transitional sleepers" were boys rated higher in terms of irritability and distractibility. Surprisingly, they were more likely to be breastfed. Their mothers were also more likely to be depressed, a condition perhaps exacerbated by sleep deprivation.

Weinraub believes such findings reflect the correlation between "difficult temperaments and early sleep problems." She suggests that families with babies experiences sleeping problems beyond 18 months should seek advice.

She stresses the importance of letting babies learn to fall asleep on their own. "When mothers tune in to these night time awakenings and/or if a baby is in the habit of falling asleep during breastfeeding, then he or she may not be learning to how to self-soothe, something that is critical for regular sleep." 

So while we may think we are doing the best for baby by rushing in to comfort him with a breast or a cuddle, we may in fact be prolonging wakefulness. 

"The best advice is to put infants to bed at a regular time every night, allow them to fall asleep on their own and resist the urge to respond right away to awakenings."

What do you make of this study? Are you a fan, or an enemy, of the cry it out approach?