In my opinion, poem 'child and Mother's Eugene Field was complete with the love between a child and the mother love,caring between a mother and a child...the poem is really meaningful and superb...
Not necessarily. There are no rules for parental love. A man could love his child's mother and not love his child at all; on the other hand, a man could love his child so much it rules his life without even knowing the child's mother. It's possible an estrangement from the child's mother could affect a man's feelings about his child, but this is more likely to be a temporary distraction rather than a true change in emotions.
To break up with the one you love just to go back with the mother of your child is not the solution. What you should be doing is staying with the person you love; meet with the mother of your child and tell her you will support your child and be part of that child's life and there is no reason why the mother of your child can't get out and work. To break up with the one you love and end up living with the mother of your child will only create heartbreak between the parents of that child and it will not be a good environment for that child.
NO
Because she love her child.
The number of words a normal child of 5 years old understand and use of his mother tongue language vary from child to child and the relationship and surroundings the child is brought up in.
The love from a child is enough for a mother. The hardest job is the best job. :)
A relationship between a mother and her child or between a father and his child.
No. Mothers in general love their children equally.
A mother can show she loves her child in many different ways. She can spend more time with her child much more often. But it mostly depends on the child's personality.
A mother's love for her child will continue no matter what the child has done. The parent can hate what the child has done and what the child has become while still loving the child. Real love is not earned or dependent on anything, it is freely given and knows bounds.
That no matter what your child does or says, she/he will always have a home to go to.