Great Special Needs Jumpsuit can help solve compulsive stripping problems with Alzheimer’s patients. Terrific in a nursing home or hospital setting. This soft knit jumpsuit is designed as a one-piece garment for the inappropriate undresser. Caregivers for those with dementia or Alzheimer’s appreciate these anti-strip jumpsuits. Won't allow undressing, self-toileting of diaper removal. It features a long back zipper from neckline thru waist. Round collar. Long sleeves. Also has a tab and snap closures at the back neckline, making it difficult for the wearer to open and remove. Elastic at sides of waistline gives the jumpsuit more of a fitted shape and body. It will discourage inappropriate undressing and is an ideal solution for those with a tendency to undress. Great for sleeping. Super soft to the touch.
J**D
Another great installment in the series!
I am really enjoying this series! Emma is doing so well writing these believable characters, taking some crazy plot twists, which could totally throw a kink into the whole thing, and smoothing it out like butter (cheesy metaphor? Yah, sorry). I was a little unsure of this one going in but it was sooo good! You just never know exactly what to expect with a relationship where the main characters are 20 years apart in age, but Emma makes this work. Amazingly well! It’s fantastic and I loved it!Zoey and Gavin are absolutely perfect for each other! Zoey’s more uptight nature makes her the perfect fit for Gavin and I honestly didn’t even think about the age gap after the first few chapters. They just work together!There are so many things to love about this book: Delilah (stick it to the man, girl!); the scene in the parking lot with the shirt (totally clean and totally hilarious!); Abby and Zane on the double date (laughed out loud); the sickness; the surprise twist! I totally gasped out loud and could not believe what was happening—and this was near the beginning! What?!; the ranch; the kiss in the barn! Oh my. I know this is not a list that will make sense to anyone who hasn’t read this book and I guess that means you need to read it because it’s all soooo good. Also, Zoey’s dad. He’s pretty awesome and I love him.This series is getting better and better and I’m so excited to start the third!*Note: a steamy kissing scene and some mild innuendoes; still clean by my definition.Quotes I loved:Sometimes, I miss this early Taylor. I’ve given long thought to the fact that the world doesn’t seem to allow for both. Pick a lane—strong or sweet. At least, if you’re a woman. Men seem to get a free pass on this.I learned at an early age that, as sexist as it is, downplaying my ambition is a smart move. Strong women, driven women—we get labeled with words that would never be used to describe a man doing or wanting the same things. I work hard, but the full extent of my drive is kept close to my heart, guarded like a tiny photo tucked inside a locket.And yes, different get kinds of chocolate have different colors. Anyone who loves chocolate as much as I do understand this.I wonder goes close Nancy was to being eaten by her own cat. Based on its narrow yellow eyes, I think I’ve gotten here just in time.We have that in common, which I’ve always thought of as a good thing, something that would make us work well together. Maybe not.Or maybe you need to get out of your head. Probably that.“I’m so glad you find this funny.”“Sorry. But when the unflappable Gavin Brownell becomes flapped, I have to take some small pleasure in it.”I don’t recognize the voice, but at first, I’m simply thankful that it’s finally someone who doesn’t sound like a barnyard animal.Gavin makes a pleasant humming sound, drawing my attention to his mouth. Delicious.The candy. The candy is delicious. I force my attention away from his full lips.This is better, her lips softer, her taste sweeter: chocolate pie and coffee.I’ve seen colorful llamas decorating pillows and shirts and backpacks everywhere recently. Clearly, this was orchestrated by people who haven’t spent time around llamas.I’m laughing, even as she speaks me head to toe. And it’s in this moment, watching Zoey’s wide smile, her messy braid, and a shirt covered in llama spot, I realize that I’m helplessly in love.“Your only requirements are that I can’t date a felon or a hipster?”“They just wear the tightest pants,” Dad mutters. “And don’t get me started on those dirty beards.”“It’s only bern a few days. I can hardly tell the woman I’m in love with her.”“Sure you can,” Mama says. “You just open your big mouth and say it. ‘I love you, Zoey.’ See? Not hard.”Maybe she’s right. Mama often is, even when she’s not. I learned that lesson in childhood. But in this, I do think she’s right.“I should have made sure you knew how I felt much sooner. Years ago.”Her blue eyes blink up at me, so bright and clear and beautiful. “And how do you feel?” She asks in a whisper.“Like a man who will do anything for the woman her lives. And I do love you, Zoey. There are complications, but I’d like to think Love will uncomplicate them. That is…if that love is returned?”Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫
K**Y
Terrific, G-rated, contemporary romance
For the past two years, Zoey has been Gavin’s assistant and protégé in a marketing company, and the whole time, she has done her best to tamp down and conceal her highly unprofessional, intense, romantic attraction toward her infinitely desirable boss. Gavin is single, wealthy, and gorgeous, and as far as 23-year-old Zoey knows, he not only has no girlfriend, he almost never goes out on a date. Unfortunately, because he is her boss and, worse, is 20 years older than her at age 43, any possibility of romance between them is doomed from the start. On the plus side, Zoey has been completely successful at hiding her feelings for Gavin behind a blank, unemotional mask. But that hard-won achievement has earned her the snide nickname around the office as, the “robot.”Zoey has been contemplating for weeks turning in her resignation to escape the increasingly painful pangs of an unrequited adoration for Gavin that refuses to starve to death. Until the day that Gavin’s 60-something secretary gets terribly ill with a horrible flu, which induces temporary delirium due to a high fever, and Zoey and Gavin simultaneously show up at the woman’s house to check on her. A few days after that, Gavin comes down with the same devastating flu and, while in the midst of his own fevered delirium, desperately texts Zoey to come and help him. While nursing him back to health, the former, power-imbalance dynamic of their relationship flips on its head and, suddenly, a romantic connection, once so utterly impossible, careens into the realm of eminently plausible.I’m actually someone who has always purposely avoided romance novels with huge age differences. Prior to reading this novel, I had previously read only a handful of them during decades of romance reading. Even the late, great Georgette Heyer could not fully win me over in the several books she wrote with an 18-year age difference between a 17-year-old, naïve heroine and a world-weary, 35-year-old, noble hero. But in spite of that personal prejudice, because I had just read and greatly enjoyed the first book in this cute, G-rated, contemporary romance series, I leaped into reading this book. And I am so glad I took a chance on it.Zoey and Gavin are highly sympathetic characters whom I liked very much, both individually and as a couple. There are also a whole lot of wonderful, vividly drawn subcharacters in this book, most notably Gavin’s fantastic parents, whom I adored. In addition, the classic, “secret baby” trope so beloved in the romance genre is included in this novel with a compellingly unique twist—the secret baby does not belong to the heroine. It is a well done subplot that skillfully forwards the romance. It also frequently brought tears to my eyes, which is a remarkable feat in and of itself, considering what an extremely jaded romance reader I am.It is a challenging task for G-rated romance novelists to plausibly create a modern relationship between attractive, compelling protagonists, who have strong sexual chemistry but never make love, when religious conviction prohibiting “fornication” plays no part in the situation—which it does not in this book. But though there are no more than a few kisses in this whole book, because of the adroit way that this talented author has constructed the plot, it definitely made sense to me that these characters did not have sex before arriving at a the classic, committed, romance-novel HEA.All in all, I raced through this book, reading every word, which is an uncommon occurrence for me these days, and I am currently eagerly jumping into reading Book 3 in this delightful series, after devouring this book and Book 1.I rate this book as follows:Heroine: 5 starsHero: 5 starsSubcharacters: 5 starsRomance Plot: 5 starsSecret Baby Plot: 5 starsWriting: 5 starsOverall: 5 stars
H**R
Disappointed in wear and tear factor
Purchased 3 over the past 6 months for mother in LTC with need for overnight onesie garments - only the most recent one still useable. Because she finds the neck closure irritating, and picks at the back, the zippers did not hold up at all. We chose these for the lightwt fabric and look, but unfortunately they also do not hold up to an institution's laundry - shrunk ++ .
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