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The Mother Hesitates: It's a good trick in selling the second to have a waste basket at hand, and then if the mother hesitates about buy¬ing another print, the salesgirl who, has taken it from the files should throw it away immediately, while the mother is watching, and explain with a smile that it's impossible to keep any rejected prints in the files. Seeing a picture of her loved one thrown into a waste basket for later burning has enough effect on the mother to make her change her mind and buy it.
Gestation takes 16 days; 7-15 in litter; young born pink, naked, and blind. Do not disturb young or mother for at least a week after birth; if disturbed mother will either kill and eat the young or ne¬glect them and allow them to die. After 3 weeks, remove young from mother; otherwise, mother fights with them and often kills them. Sexes should be separated before young reach maturity at 43 days.See Also Came The Mother Told:When the father came the mother told him about Hilda's not wanting the pea soup and he answered sternly, "Let her have it for dinner; she will learn."
At dinner time the mother got the pea soup out of the refrigerator to give to Hilda, but then she changed her mind. She gave the child, instead, fresh vegetables and other things, and heated the pea soup for herself. The father was angry and said, "You always let her have her way, you spoil her." The mother answered, "She had nothing for lunch. I will let her enjoy her dinner now. She needs it." He was silent and went on eating. The child sat down and ate very well without any urging from her parents.
The next day at lunch the mother told Hilda that there was only pea soup. She looked at her mother and said, "O.K., Mummy, I'll have some pea soup." She ate all of it while she babbled happily about school.
When the father came the mother told him about Hilda's not wanting the pea soup and he answered sternly, "Let her have it for dinner; she will learn."
At dinner time the mother got the pea soup out of the refrigerator to give to Hilda, but then she changed her mind. She gave the child, instead, fresh vegetables and other things, and heated the pea soup for herself. The father was angry and said, "You always let her have her way, you spoil her." The mother answered, "She had nothing for lunch. I will let her enjoy her dinner now. She needs it." He was silent and went on eating. The child sat down and ate very well without any urging from her parents.
The next day at lunch the mother told Hilda that there was only pea soup. She looked at her mother and said, "O.K., Mummy, I'll have some pea soup." She ate all of it while she babbled happily about school.
On The Other Hand See Expectant Mother Was Once:Mother¬hood not only gives satisfactions; it also demands sacrifices—considerable drudgery is often involved. The mother cannot expect to have the freedom she knew before she had a baby to care for. Yet she should not go to the extreme of devoting herself exclusively to the baby. It is better for the expectant mother to take a realistic view in advance than to be completely disillusioned after the baby is born.
The fact that the expectant mother was once amused by the clowns at a circus cannot be offered as the reason why the child acts foolishly when he grows up.
Birthmarks often suggest curious connections with something the mother has thought or done. However, it is simply coincidence that a birthmark resembling a crab appears on a child whose mother was frightened by a crab at some time during the prenatal period. In Little Pierre, Anatole France makes the following entertaining comment: |
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