Little Lounger Rocking Seats - Your fabric may look different.
Name of product:
Graco Little Lounger Rocking Seat
Hazard:
Infant fatalities have been reported with other manufacturers’ inclined sleep products, after infants rolled from their back to their stomach or side, or under other circumstances.
Remedy:
Refund
Recall date:
January 29, 2020
Consumer Contact:
Contact Graco toll-free at 800-345-4109 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET Monday through Friday or online at www.gracobaby.com and click on Recall Information.
Recall Details
Description:
The Graco Little Lounger Rocking Seat™ is two products in one, a rocking seat and a vibrating lounger. Most models (model numbers 1872034, 1875063, 1875102, 1877160, 1882081, 1896313, 1908957, 1914283 and 2047734) have multiple incline positions and one model (model number 1922809) has one incline position. The model number is located on a label on one of the metal legs.
Remedy:
Consumers should immediately stop using the product and contact Graco for a cash refund or a voucher.
Incidents/Injuries:
None reported.
Sold At:
Target, Babies R Us and other stores nationwide and online at various websites from 2013 through 2018 for about $80.
Importer(s):
Graco Children’s Products Inc., of Atlanta, Ga.
Manufactured In:
China
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If you could ask an experienced psychotherapist a question, what would you ask?
This blog is all about using psychology in everyday life.
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Little Lounger Rocking Seats RECALLED
Labels: test
baby safety,
Graco Little Lounger Rocking Seat,
recall,
safety
Monday, January 27, 2020
Teens Tattoos and Piercings: MD’s advised to talk with patients
Philip Copitch, Ph.D. ~ Author of Basic Parenting 101: The Manual Your Child Should Have Been Born With
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In my practice, I work with a lot of teenagers. Most are angry, and often confused, about their feelings and role in society. Regularly, they want tattoos and often are bashing heads with their parents about getting them.
In the last 10 years, the age of children who want a tattoo or piercing has gotten younger. It is common for parents to consent to earrings, especially for their daughters. The conflict often starts when the child, as young as 11, wants a bar across the upper ear cartilage, or a lip hoop, nose bobble, belly button jewelry, or a tongue barbell.
Many parents try to be reasonable and chose to barter, “OK, when you are 13 you can get a small nose ring.” At this point the whining starts, “But why do I have to wait?” “Sarah’s mom let her get a tongue stud.” The incessant whining often comes with tears and tantrums.
In a recent article in MD Edge Pediatric News, the author states:
“Although Dr. Breuner didn’t want her daughter to get the piercing, she knew saying “no” wasn’t likely to stop her teenager any more than it would another adolescent…”
I hear this often. And I agree. Parents need to say, “no” if they believe that, “no” is the correct answer. Unapproved piercings and tattoos may happen, but it is not a guarantee. The important thing is to set the expectation.
If I say no my teen yells and hates me more
OK. Your child does not like the limit setting you are doing. Welcome to parenthood. My question to you, as a caring parent, when will you set a limit? At a tongue piercing? At a nipple barbell? At a penis or labia piercing?
Tattoos, piercing, and/or cigarettes are often a fight for control
Often teens demand permission to smoke, get a tattoo, or a piercing as a way to gain a feeling of control. (Similar to a balding, newly divorced man buying a sports car.) The issue isn’t the tattoo or the piercing it is an attempt at a quick fix. The teen is trying to solve the age-old problem they struggle with, “I want to be taken care of but I also want complete freedom.”
Teens often know what they want but not what they need. I recommend having the ongoing discussion (drama and all) with your teen. Buckling because of your fear of being disobeyed or being yelled at will not help you build a supportive relationship with your child.
I recommend digging deep into why your teen wants to change their body. What do they expect to change in their lives when they have the new piercing or tattoo?
I have been told, by teenagers, many deeply held reasons for getting a tattoo or piercing:
- I want to be noticed
- I want to be cool/different/feared
- I want to get a boyfriend/girlfriend
- I want excitement in my stressful life
- My favorite answer came from a 15-year-old, profoundly shy boy who had never had a date or held a girl’s hand: I want a tongue stud so I can pleasure girls the way they like to be pleasured.
Please note, the issue often isn't the tattoos or piercings it is the problem the teen thinks the tattoo or piercing will solve.
The following article has lots of helpful ideas and solid information concerning teens, tattoos, and piercings.
Please let me know what you think by clicking the “comments” below.
Labels: test
parenting Talking to teens,
piercing,
psychology,
real problem,
tattoos,
teenagers
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