When a child runs to his mother after hearing a clap of thunder, the child is using a natural instinct for seeking comfort and security in response to fear. This behavior reflects attachment theory, where the child relies on the caregiver as a source of safety during distressing situations. The mother's presence provides reassurance and helps the child cope with their anxiety about the thunder.
His senses of being scared!
There are many signs of a mother using a child to meet her own needs. This can be seen if the child is forced to do things that they shouldn't have to do.
Provided that your child's hearing loss is sensorineural and not conductive - and if it is profound it is certainly at least partially sensorineural - then no, there is no medical treatment or intervention that will correct his/her hearing loss. If your child is having a profound sensorineura hearing loss, please consider a cochlear implant to achieve the closest to normal hearing. My advice as a cochlear implant surgeon would be - dont delay, to avoid neural plasticity.
You will have to have proof that she is using drugs in order to use that in a court hearing to try to get custody of your child. Her living with her mother does not qualify as being an unfit parent and if the child is 23 years old then they are an adult so there should be no reason to need to prove your ex wife is an unfit mother.
The mother was found guilty of willful child neglect.
noAnswerThis is a question best answered by a physician. However, a hearing impaired child can benefit greatly from using hearing aids. Whilst I agree this is best answered by a physician, unfortunately some youngsters are born deaf, or have an illness or accident and need hearing aids.
Yes, the noun thunder is a mass noun. Multiples of thunder are expressed as the object of a preposition (a lot of thunder, claps of thunder, rolls of thunder, etc.), or using an adjective (loud thunder, rumbling thunder, deafening thunder, etc.)
No, I have never heard of thunder power.
The Sky Was Black, Then Came The Thunder and Lighting.
To determine the distance of lightning, count the seconds between seeing the lightning and hearing the thunder. Divide this number by 5 to estimate the distance in miles.
To determine how close lightning is using a specific method or tool, you can count the seconds between seeing the lightning and hearing the thunder. For every 5 seconds you count, the lightning is approximately 1 mile away.
If the man has access to the child, the mother need not know, using a test kit. But, to stop child support, this cannot be done in 20 states under any circumstances, and has to be done with the first 24 months in the other 30.