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Millennials are saying their boomer parents spent their childhoods expressing anxiety at them. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementMillennial parents are discussing shielding their kids from the anxieties their baby boomer parents projected on them while they were growing up. Dr. Harvey Karp, a pediatrician and author, told Salon in 2022 that millennial parents tend to be more accepting of a child's emotions compared to boomers, who were more likely to dismiss them.
Persons: , Gaby Day, Day, gasping, Harvey Karp Organizations: Service Locations: millennials
Welcome to the Era of Very Earnest Parenting
  + stars: | 2023-05-13 | by ( Caitlin Moscatello | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Another popular account is Big Little Feelings, created by two longtime friends, Kristin Gallant, 36, and Deena Margolin, 33, a licensed psychotherapist. Started just before the pandemic began, Big Little Feelings now has more than three million followers on Instagram, and the mood is more moms-in-survival-mode. Solid Starts, which helps parents safely introduce new foods and avoid picky eating, has 2.6 million followers on Instagram. Taking Cara Babies, a sleep training guide for exhausted parents, has 2.4 million followers. Busy Toddler, an account dedicated to thoughtful play, has two million followers.
You're a sucker if you trust ChatGPT
  + stars: | 2023-02-19 | by ( Matt Turner | Dave Smith | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +4 min
But first: Adam Rogers, a senior tech correspondent at Insider, breaks down why ChatGPT is for suckers. Well, social scientists don't really know why anyone believes anything, from kooky stuff they read on Twitter to closely held ideals. Faced with those conditions, Gen Z has adapted to a new normal: When in doubt, find a new job. It has rankled some of the academics and advocates whose work helped kick off the psychedelics renaissance in the first place. Insider spoke to more than a dozen industry participants to chart its rise and its role in the psychedelics boom.
Dr. Harvey Karp nearly announced last summer that the FDA certified that Snoo reduces SIDS. But 15 years later, the ability of the Snoo — now on the market as a $1,700 high-tech bassinet — to reduce SIDS remains unproven. Despite lofty promises from Karp and Nina Montée Karp, his wife and cofounder, experts who spoke with Insider remain skeptical. Karp said he and his wife created the Snoo to reduce parent stress and reduce SIDS. But the FDA approval never came, and the press release was never officially distributed.
Karp and Montée Karp built the hype into a parenting-media empire that put out three books and two instructional films in 10 years. Karp and Montée Karp met at a Hollywood party in the early '90s. Karp and Montée Karp promised her independence and flexibility to accommodate her two young children's day-care schedules and a 90-minute commute. Karp and Montée Karp insisted on being involved in minutiae that most top executives hand off. Karp and Montée Karp turned the Snoo into an award-winning holy grail of parenthood in just a few years.
Karp and Montée Karp built the hype into a parenting-media empire that put out three books and two instructional films in 10 years. Karp and Montée Karp met at a Hollywood party in the early '90s. Karp and Montée Karp promised her independence and flexibility to accommodate her two young children's day-care schedules and a 90-minute commute. Karp and Montée Karp insisted on being involved in minutiae that most top executives hand off. Karp and Montée Karp turned the Snoo into an award-winning holy grail of parenthood in just a few years.
Harvey Karp Wants to Make Infants Safer and Happier
  + stars: | 2022-12-10 | by ( Emily Bobrow | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
In 2004, Harvey Karp delivered a lecture about the fact that some 3,500 babies in the U.S. died each year from sleep-related deaths before their first birthday. “I said if a foreign country killed 3,500 of our babies, we would go to war,” Dr. Karp, 71, recalls over video from his office in Los Angeles, where he works with Nina Montée Karp, his wife and business partner. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the rate of sudden infant deaths hasn’t declined since 1999. Fewer infants are dying in their cribs, owing to a public-health campaign launched in the early 1990s advising parents to put babies down on their backs. But Dr. Karp notes that “babies don’t sleep well on their backs, so poor, tired parents” are bringing them into their own beds, where babies are more likely to die of suffocation.
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