Lo que se me hace increíble de Samuel García, es la gente aspiracionista que lo defiende, dicen que se merece descansar, no mame señora que se pelea en facebook mienteas espera en la parada del camión para ir a su jale de 8 horas diarias.
Un mes sin jale al cabo @marrdzcantu es la gobernadora de NL
Par de payasos
Se le olvide este señor @samuel_garcias qué está haciendo investigado por peculado, corrupción, enriquecimiento ilícito
Hoy mi hija me dijo que le preocupa no poder jugar fútbol en la selección, me dice que como carambas, no puede ser, “tienen miedo de jugar con una mujer". Están reforzando estereotipos de género y nos dejan en desempleo. Lo entendió todo, 40 años tiene y vive con nosotros.
A good parent never shows favoritism between their children, no matter their age or gender.
That’s a beautiful example of true parenting. When love is given equally, children learn solidarity instead of competition.
Real education begins at home.
Es que neta no mms, ya hasta da risa de lo bananero que es este país. A quién rayos se le ocurrió que la canción de un mundial de hombres debería de ser representada por una huerca inexistente que quiere jugar fútbol, enserio no mms. Harta de este feminismo innecesario.
Japanese neuroscientists spent years working out how to put a crying baby to sleep. They wired 21 babies to heart monitors, tested different ways of being held, and landed on a 13-minute routine. The grandma in this video has been doing it for three generations.
Three labs working independently arrived at the same answer from different angles. The first piece came from a pediatrician named Harvey Karp who published it in 2002 after years of studying how parents around the world calm their babies. Babies are born with a built-in calming switch in their brain. The switch flips on whenever something mimics the womb: warmth, snug pressure, gentle movement, a steady whooshing sound. Once it flips, fussing stops and sleep takes over. Karp called it the calming reflex. Every parent has set it off dozens of times without knowing it has a name.
The second piece comes from a sleep lab in Geneva. In 2019, researchers there put adults on a bed that rocked gently, about one sway every four seconds, and watched their brains all night. People fell asleep faster. They also dropped into deeper sleep, the kind where the brain locks in memories from the day. The part of your inner ear that senses motion is wired directly into the parts of your brain that handle sleep. Rocking syncs your brain waves.
The third piece is the most direct. A 2022 study put tiny heart monitors on 28 babies at home and watched how their bodies reacted to different kinds of touch. Only four kinds of touch worked: rocking, patting, bouncing, and stroking. Each one triggered the calming response within seconds. Heart rate dropped. The body shifted into rest mode.
The 13 minutes came from a team at RIKEN, one of Japan's biggest research institutes. They tracked how different ways of holding babies affected their heart rates and figured out the exact recipe. Walk around with the baby in your arms for five minutes. Then sit, still holding them, for another five to eight minutes. Only then put them down. The wait was the surprise finding. Put the baby down too early and they wake up. Give them eight full minutes of held sleep first, and they stay asleep.
All of this lived inside grandmothers' arms for thousands of years before anyone hooked a baby up to a sensor. Passed quietly from mother to daughter to granddaughter. The neuroscience just caught up.
What you're watching is roughly the same protocol a Japanese lab might publish in 2026. Grandma already knew. The citations are optional.
Qué padre la vida de @samuel_garcias: puro robar, viajar, gastar dinero que no es suyo; pagar inseminaciones para que se embarace la esposa 🤰🏼y hacerse pendejo en redes sociales.
🙃
Resulta que si dejas un tupper abierto en el refri, que si lees mil veces un párrafo, que si te manchas comer y que si lavas los trastes mientras ves la tele es porque tienes TDAH. Ya estoy harta, todo es TDAH y lo peor es que hacen de su personalidad ese trastorno.
No es por arruinar el Día de la Madre, pero creo necesario reconocer también a todas las mujeres que libre y responsablemente hemos elegido no ser mamás. Se habla poco de lo que esta lúcida elección aporta a la humanidad.
Pero no estamos preparados para esta conversación.