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‘I would die': Stay-at-home mum's shocking night-time routine sparks fierce debate
‘I would die': Stay-at-home mum's shocking night-time routine sparks fierce debate

News.com.au

time3 days ago

  • Lifestyle
  • News.com.au

‘I would die': Stay-at-home mum's shocking night-time routine sparks fierce debate

They're a bunch of night owls. How someone chooses to parent their child is a personal choice — and one mum's approach has many people scratching their heads. It's typical for most young kids to have an early bath and bedtime schedule, but Emily Boazman chooses to do the complete opposite. Dinner time in the Boazman household is as late as 9:30pm and bedtime stories take place close to midnight, New York Post reports. Staying up late is something many kids can only dream of — but for Boazman's three homeschooled kids, who are 9, 7 and 3 — this is their norm. Once he's home — usually after 8pm — is when the family will begin their wind-down routine for the night, which often includes an evening walk, followed by cooking dinner, cleaning up, Boazman's daughters getting their hair prepped for the next day, bath time and then finally bedtime, which is usually a little after midnight, according to a viral video the mum posted with time stamps. 'They wake up just fine' — usually around 10:30am.,' Boazman told Newsweek in an interview. 'I have to tell them to get up a few times but once they're out of bed, they're perfect for the rest of the day.' Boazman's untypical regimen for her family caught many by surprise in the comment section of her video. 'OMG, I would die if we were making food at 9pm. I'm thinking about bed at that time.' 'This is chaotic. I can't imagine growing up in this chaos.' 'This is my worst nightmare.' Yet, many others agreed with — and even related to — her logic. 'Thank God there is other families that don't make their kids go to bed at 7 and have a day routine I'm winging this thing called motherhood & life.' 'We do something similar! in bed by midnight. it's amazing because early mornings at the woooorst.' 'Why I homeschool…we get to decide our schedule and our lifestyle. We are night owls too.' Boazman isn't the only mum whose parenting style has raised some eyebrows. Jeri-Leah is a mum of four who doesn't believe in rules. She also posted a controversial video on social media where she explained that she never expects her kids to do chores or have any responsibilities. 'You don't have to tidy, I will do that. I don't mind. I'll put your clothes away, I'll wash your clothes. That's my job, I'm your mum; I'm gonna mother you; let me smother you.'

Mom's shocking nighttime routine for her kids has people divided: ‘I can't imagine growing up in this chaos'
Mom's shocking nighttime routine for her kids has people divided: ‘I can't imagine growing up in this chaos'

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Lifestyle
  • Yahoo

Mom's shocking nighttime routine for her kids has people divided: ‘I can't imagine growing up in this chaos'

They're a bunch of night owls. How someone chooses to parent their child is a personal choice — and one mom's approach has many people scratching their heads. It's typical for most young kids to have an early bath and bedtime schedule, but Emily Boazman chooses to do the complete opposite. Dinner time in the Boazman household is as late as 9:30 p.m. and bedtime stories take place close to midnight. Staying up late is something many kids can only dream of — but for Boazman's three homeschooled kids, who are 9, 7 and 3 — this is their norm. The stay-at-home mom is married to a district attorney who usually gets home from work on the late side. Once he's home — usually after 8 p.m. — is when the family will begin their wind-down routine for the night, which often includes an evening walk, followed by cooking dinner, cleaning up, Boazman's daughters getting their hair prepped for the next day, bathtime and then finally bedtime, which is usually a little after midnight, according to a viral video the mom posted with time stamps. 'They wake up just fine' — usually around 10:30 a.m.,' Boazman told Newsweek in an interview. 'I have to tell them to get up a few times but once they're out of bed, they're perfect for the rest of the day.' Boazman's untypical regimen for her family caught many by surprise in the comment section of her video. 'Omg, I would die if we were making food at 9pm. I'm thinking about bed at that time.' 'This is chaotic. I can't imagine growing up in this chaos.' 'This is my worst nightmare.' Yet, many others agreed with — and even related to — her logic. 'Thank God there is other families that don't make their kids go to bed at 7 and have a day routine I'm winging this thing called motherhood & life.' 'We do something similar! in bed by midnight. it's amazing because early mornings at the woooorst.' 'Why I homeschool…we get to decide our schedule and our lifestyle. We are night owls too.' Boazman isn't the only mom whose parenting style has raised some eyebrows. Jeri-Leah is a mom of four who doesn't believe in rules. She also posted a controversial video on social media where she explained that she never expects her kids to do chores or have any responsibilities. 'You don't have to tidy, I will do that. I don't mind. 'I'll put your clothes away, I'll wash your clothes. That's my job, I'm your mom; I'm gonna mother you; let me smother you.' Solve the daily Crossword

Night owls tend to have more health risks than early birds—including cognitive decline, new study finds
Night owls tend to have more health risks than early birds—including cognitive decline, new study finds

Yahoo

time02-06-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Night owls tend to have more health risks than early birds—including cognitive decline, new study finds

Night owls—people whose natural body clock, or chronotype, skews to late sleep and wake times—are already forced to wake up too early for office jobs and to deal with derision from early birds. And now comes a new affront: research concluding that they appear to decline faster, cognitively, than morning people. To look into this, dementia researcher Ana Wenzler at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands analyzed sleep-based questionnaires through a large national study, BIRD-NL Project. She was able to determine people's chronotypes and found that 52% were morning people, 44% intermediate, and only about 5% night owls—different from the general global population breakdown, where typically 30% are night owls, 40% early birds, and the rest in between. Next, Wenzler looked at the results of a cognitive function test over a 10-year period to see how the scores differed at the end of the decade. Her conclusion was that evening people saw faster cognitive decline. But every night owl may not have the same risk. 'We found that 25% of the effect was due to lower sleep quality and smoking,' Wenzler tells Fortune. 'So, having a healthy lifestyle could lower the negative effect of having a late chronotype a bit.' She says that, for this study, she only looked into the executive function of the brain, so more research is needed into how chronotype affects memory, language, and other cognitive aspects. But the increased risk here, interestingly, was found mostly in highly educated people. 'That probably has to do with their sleep rhythm,' Wenzler said in a news release. 'They are often people who have to go back to work early in the morning and are therefore more likely to sleep too short, giving their brains too little rest.' This tracks with a previous body of research showing that night owls, compared with early risers, face various health risks—a 30% higher risk of diabetes, nearly double the odds of depression and other psychological disorders, increased heart disease risk, and a 10% higher all-cause mortality risk. 'All of this evidence, to me at least, impresses the fact that when we do not sleep in harmony with our chronotype, the ensuing sleep disruption that unfolds has consequences,' Matt Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, and founder and director of the Center for Human Sleep Science, previously told Fortune. He added, 'There is vast variability in chronotype, and it's important to sleep in harmony with yours.' (You can determine it with this free calculator.) But if work and other factors won't allow you to stay up till 2 a.m. and sleep in until 10 a.m., could you push yourself to become an early bird? 'Some studies showed that intensive intervention could help change your chronotype… but only by a few hours,' Wenzler says. 'But forcing yourself to get up early every day while you are an extreme evening person will not make you a morning person. In these cases, it might be best to adapt your life, as much as possible, to your chronotype.' Walker also noted that only slight shifts are really possible, and that the ongoing, disciplined interventions that are required to truly change chronotypes are 'just not tenable,' he said. 'Let night owls sleep as they were biologically designed. At least, that's how I feel on the basis of the science and medicine of the data.' So, is the cognitive health of night owls just simply doomed? 'If these individuals are doomed is hard to say, as we only had a follow-up of 10 years,' says Wenzler, explaining that the true long-term effects—particularly whether or not night owls are more likely to develop dementia—need further investigation. 'Faster cognitive decline in middle age does not necessarily mean a higher risk of dementia,' she said in the news release. 'With our research, we hope to find out more about this. This will ultimately help us to be able to give people informed advice on how to try to prevent dementia.' More on cognitive health: 5 ways to reduce your dementia risk as study estimates U.S. cases could double by 2060 A study on the Mediterranean diet offers the strongest proof yet that it's associated with healthy brain aging It's not just forgetfulness: 8 early warning signs of dementia This story was originally featured on

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