#779450 - Fri Mar 16 2012 06:06 PM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: Christinap]
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Champion Poster
Registered: Mon Jul 09 2007
Posts: 29454
Loc: Ottawa Ontario Canada
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Probably around 11 or 12, but if for whatever reason I didn't get up and mom was home and knew I was supposed to be getting up, she'd come in and see what was going on. Saved me sleeping through whole weekend shifts at work a couple of times! When I was in high school though she had always left for work before it was time for me to get up, so that was totally my responsibility.
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#779455 - Fri Mar 16 2012 08:07 PM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: guitargoddess]
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Forum Champion
Registered: Sun May 18 2003
Posts: 7774
Loc: Arizona USA
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Mom always stopped by our bedroom door (I shared a room with my younger sister) on her way to the kitchen and told us to get up. This happened every morning Monday-Friday until the day I graduated High School. We had a one bathroom house and we had to wait until Dad was done anyway. I was, and still am, notorious for hitting the snooze button on my alarm without even realizing that the alarm went off. When I moved out on my own, I had to put the alarm across the room so that when it went off, I'd have to get out of bed to turn if off. There have been times that I will walk back to bed and go back to sleep and not remember having gotten up. I get up easier these days, but hubby usually wakes me when he gets up. And since I don't have children, I never had to worry about getting them up. Good thing too, since I couldn't wake even myself up most times.
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That which we manifest is before us; we are the creators of our own destiny.
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#779491 - Sat Mar 17 2012 01:21 AM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: nycdmc70]
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Star Poster
Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 10480
Loc: Fanling Hong Kong
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Yes, you send the dog in
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Wandering aimlessly through FT since 1999.
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#779573 - Sat Mar 17 2012 05:25 PM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: nycdmc70]
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Forum Champion
Registered: Wed Oct 17 2001
Posts: 7986
Loc: Hastings Sussex England UK
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Then what happens when the dog crawls into the bed next to the teen? Send in the cat? Well, when I commuted between Hastings and London in my early twenties, we had a little cat who used to wake me up between 5:15 and 5:30 in the mornings. She also seemed to know the difference between weekdays and weekends. From Monday to Friday she would jump on my bed and lick my face till I couldn't try to sleep any more and had to get up. On Saturdays and Sundays she would push at my head with her face like a mole until she had pushed me off the pillow. Then she would curl up in the space I had vacated, leaving me to go back to sleep with my head dangling off the side of the bed.
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Dilige et quod vis fac
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#779595 - Sat Mar 17 2012 07:27 PM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: TabbyTom]
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Multiloquent
Registered: Sat May 17 2008
Posts: 2179
Loc: Northampton England UK
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When I was a teenager my mother yelled. Initially from the bottom of the stairs, then from the landing, and then about a foot from my ear. Eventually I would crawl out of bed, into the bathroom, down the stairs, round a cup of hot chocolate, and on to my bike. It was two miles to school, downhill most of the way so I didn't even have to pedal and the breeze on my face gradually woke me up enough to race through the playing fields to the bikesheds to the school assembly with two minutes to spare. In the sixth form I flashed my prefect's badge and would tell latecomers off; they deserved it - if I could get to school on time anyone could! When I left home I took with me an alarm clock with the most strident ring I could find and a biscuit tin. If I balanced the lid across the corner of the tin and then placed the clock on that, and then put the whole shebang on the other side of the room when the alarm went off the vibration would make the clock fall into the tin and that noise might just wake me up. After two years of this I gave up getting up to go to work and went back to being a student so I could sleep. However, we had one particularly yummy lecturer who was so gorgeous every female student attended his lectures even if they weren't taking that subject so if, like me, you were taking it getting there early was essential as the place was packed. The only problem was that his lectures were at nine on Monday mornings! Who says student life is easy? 
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The Hubble Telescope has just picked up a sound from a fraction of a second before the Big Bang. The sound was "Uh oh".
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#782298 - Wed Mar 28 2012 08:23 PM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: flopsymopsy]
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Prolific
Registered: Sat Aug 30 2008
Posts: 1595
Loc: Alberta Canada
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lol at Flopsy, that's very amusing.
TabbyTom: our cat woke us up for almost 15 years, using precisely the methods yours did, although she wouldn't crawl into one's warmed bedspace immediately - what she really wanted was BREAKFAST - not now but RIGHT NOW lol (such a "fuss" - then she'd go back to bed as if nothing was out of sorts at all).
I'm the oldest of my siblings, but as a teenager was the hardest to get up. Dad was first to work (sometimes I'd hear him yell, most times not), then Mom's screeching. Then the alarm. Then just before Mom went to work, she'd send my little sister in to jump on the bed. There was no sleeping after that. After I got married, the only way the hubby (mr. "morning person" - HIGHly annoying) could generally ensure I'd get up was to run my bathwater and put toothpaste on my toothbrush. He'd softly say "I'm going to work now, don't let the bathwater overflow". This was his way of awakening me without awakening the grumpy bear. These days he doesn't bother with the toothpaste, so I guess the honeymoon is finally over ~~~.
Odd thing is that now that I'm an old f.art I wake up no later than 5 a.m. without any "alarm system" of any sort. Apparently teens can "grow out of" almost anything : ) They may be over 50 when they finally do, but hey - "progress"!
Edited by Jakeroo (Wed Mar 28 2012 08:24 PM)
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#782668 - Fri Mar 30 2012 08:16 AM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: playmate1111]
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Mainstay
Registered: Fri Sep 07 2007
Posts: 699
Loc: Bedford England UK
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I've been thinking about doing yoga for years... time to stop thinking and start doing, perhaps. When I was at school, my father would bang the door down and shout at me to get up. What's the time? "Time to get up." Could have been worse. My schoolfriend's father would walk into her bedroom and pull the bedclothes off her, right up until her last school year, when she was 18. My son's last two years of school were ten miles away, starting at 8.30. For two years, I got up at seven, called him, made tea, called him, made him breakfast, called him, made him a packed lunch, called him... Each time I called, he answered. "I'm getting up now." At five to eight he would tumble out of bed, yelling "It's late! Look at the time! Why did you let me stay asleep? Why didn't you wake me?" I did wake you. "No you didn't." I called you every five minutes for the last hour. "No you didn't." You answered me. "No I didn't." By the time we got in the car, he accepted that I had tried, and that I can't tell the difference between a conversation with someone who's awake and a conversation with Sleeping Beauty. There is a school of thought that believes we're flogging a dead horse, trying to make adolescents conform to world timekeeping. They have a very powerful internal clock of their own. Why do teenagers sleep late?
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I appreciate people who are civil, whether they mean it or not. I think: Be civil. Do not cherish your opinion over my feelings. There's a vanity to candor that isn't really worth it. Be kind. ~ Richard Greenberg
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#782670 - Fri Mar 30 2012 09:35 AM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: lesley153]
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Enthusiast
Registered: Mon Jan 22 2007
Posts: 498
Loc: Ft. Collins Colorado USA
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I got an alarm clock at around 13 but my dad would still stop by on his way out to see if I was awake. One of my cousins was still being woken by his mom at 18. My sister would occasionally set the dogs to wake me up but that was a weekend thing for laughs.
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"Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin to slit throats."
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#786741 - Mon Apr 16 2012 05:03 AM
Re: Waking up Teenagers
[Re: bitterlyold]
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Multiloquent
Registered: Wed Feb 29 2012
Posts: 3543
Loc: Virginia USA
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I began getting up myself around 8 or 9.
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