that man. auto has chosen a wide open plain. let them come. he has his armor dryden s form long lines there to keep close drags. on and. let them come. last have courage god protect us. the holy lance was to sanctify this battle otto s worry is believe the magyars to be healed there are churches all formidable they can kill from afar the agile horsemen avoid close up combat. i. they don t aim at specific targets instead they fire devastating scattered volleys
what? can you handle it? what, what? whenever they re ready to listen. i can t hear anything he s saying. it s amazing. these are cuomo-proof. safety is always number one. never point gun at anyone. always point it at the ground. safety s on. then, line up. don t aim it at this because it s moving. don t shoot where it s at, shoot where it s going to. finally, just relax. she s funny. yes. here s a gun. spot that thing. don t stress about it. for michaela, it s her first time even holding a gun. so getting comfortable is no easy task. can i close one eye? the two eye thing does not work. i feel like i m cross-eyed. pull. i didn t i didn t even know where that went. as for chris, he has his own
entirely for kids who may not be ready. you want to be a good parent? go to the playground. climb the monkey bars with your kids. you can get in shape with them. i used to do pullups on the bars and situps in the sand box. that s what they need. the mayo clinic concludes unstructured physical activity, not training is best for kids up to age 5. but tell that to a thriving gym full of 2, 3, and 4-year-olds. i understand that there are skeptics and there are concerns. and every good thing can be done in a harmful way. but the fear of that should not keep us from doing the good things that we know are important for our children. go for it. the bottom line, brooke, every child has their own developmental timetable. this is one thing that doreen, wendy, the doctor agreed on. don t aim to live vicariously through your kid. they may learn different skills sooner or later than you hope or
that should not keep us from doing the good things that we know are important for our children. go for it! every kid has their own developmental timetable. this is something that everyone we talked to for this beast, they all agree on that, that each kid is different and has their own timetable for learning and for growing and for learning these skills. don t aim to live vicariously through your kid and don t push them to be like any of their peers and recognize individuality. they may learn different skills sooner or later than you hope to expect but the playing field will even out by the time they enter grade school. a fast growing part of sports training and even personal trainers are these kids in grade school who are training to be the pictutcher of the baseball m or stricker on the soccer team. intense training that tiger mom or no, soccer moms are actually out there really working hard on
and situps in the sand box. that s what they need. the mayo clinic concludes unstructured physical activity, not training is best for kids up to age 5. but tell that to a thriving gym full of 2, 3, and 4-year-olds. i understand that there are skeptics and there are concerns. and every good thing can be done in a harmful way. but the fear of that should not keep us from doing the good things that we know are important for our children. go for it. reporter: ali, the bottom line, every child has their own departmental timetable. this is one thing that door reen, wendy, the doctor, everyone we talked to in this piece agreed on. don t aim to live vicariously through your kid. they may learn different skills sooner or later than you hope or expect. the playing field will even out by the time they enter grade