His wife is more than likely experiencing Post Natal Depression.
Postnatal depression is a type of depression that many parents experience after having a baby.
It's a common problem, affecting more than 1 in every 10 women within a year of giving birth. It can also affect fathers and partners.
Symptoms include:
a persistent feeling of sadness and low mood
lack of enjoyment and loss of interest in the wider world
lack of energy and feeling tired all the time
trouble sleeping at night and feeling sleepy during the day
difficulty bonding with your baby
withdrawing from contact with other people
problems concentrating and making decisions
frightening thoughts – for example, about hurting your baby.
It's important to seek help as soon as possible which would include going to speak to her doctor, self-help strategies and therapy, most women make a full recovery.
The Classic Hollywood narrative is well suited to give the impression of speed. its tradition of concise exposition and tightly woven plotting can carry us along swiftly. Classic Hollywood often centers stories on characters with definite traits who want to achieve specific goals. Classical narrative <span>ties one scene to another.</span>
<span>The theme of the poem from Edgar Allan Poes' "To One in Paradise" in the third stanza reveals that there are losses from which people do not fully recover. It presents the audience about how the narrator feels that his life is nothing without his loved one and that no matter what he did in order to forget the pain, he just could not forget her.</span>
Sylvia Mendez is an American civil rights activist who contributed to ending <u>school segregation</u>. Mendez is of Mexican-Puerto Rican heritage, and was not allowed to enrol in a "whites-only" school in California. At age eight, Sylvia and her family were involved in the case <em>Mendez v. Westminster</em> (1946). The case ended school segregation in California and contributed to the civil rights movement in other states. Sylvia Mendez was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States' highest civilian honor, on February 15, 2011.