well I'm off to get a mercury thermometer and more advil...yay!
well I'm off to get a mercury thermometer and more advil...yay!
thats ozzy.. he is a "ladies man"..LOL the other one is penny..
*knock knock knock* Penny, Penny, Penny
haha, just had to!
Going back to #5 on Triple C's list, one time I was watching World of Color and a father and family, with a very good viewing spot mind you, spent the entire show yelling/complaining to CM's. Didn't seem like they watched it at all and didn't stay for the next showing, which I'm sure they would have allowed him to get an even better spot for just to accommodate his grievances whatever they were.
i just don't get the "entitlement" that some people at the parks think they have..and that star wars thread is just a prime example of somoene who wants their kids to have everything and at this minute and if they don't get it then the world should stop turning and going to a different show at a later time was not good enough
1. I feel like going on rides, especially SFMM ones or Xcelerator at Knott's.
2. I should have listened to the latest Paul Banks album much sooner
3. One day I'll have a Premiere DL+WDW AP
Hello, goodbye.
Yeah, they're pretty cool.
It's just a sneeze, it's pitiful and saddening to watch because there's nothing I can do for him.
When cats get it, it's usually an upper respiratory infection. But since he's just sneezing and not oozing, it's basically just sad lol.
He knocks 3 times, says Penny, knocks 3 more times, says Penny again, knocks 3 final times and says Penny again. I watch the show way too much.
Great.... now I wanna watch Morel Oral haha. But hello! And Goodbye! And in case I don't see ya, good afternoon, good evening and goodnight!
I see this so often with parents. Yes you want to give your child the world, but it actually does children a disservice to always get what they want. Child psychology 101. My oldest has asperger's and it is harder for him than most to understand that things don't always go the way you plan, but I still make every effort to try and teach him this. If you give a child everything they want, they grow up having a skewed outlook on life. Saying "no" to a child is actually a good thing and teaching them to handle a situation appropriately when things don't go their way will go a long way towards teaching them how to handle being a grown up.
Oh I wanna just hug you right now! Parents don't do this anymore and it's really annoying. I get parents that let their kids run wild through the store, throw things off the shelves, rip open boxes, etc and they do nothing about it. I tell the kid to knock it off, it's like they've never heard anything but "yes" their whole lives.
What's worse is watching my cat throw up or hack up a hair ball...it looks so painful for himI've only seen him do it once. He's pretty healthy.
You would not see it with me. I will not sugar coat anything with my kid. Yet, I try to make things fun for him. In this Jedi Academy thread, I tried to explain just that. The scenario the OP put there was a perfect opportunity to use as a teaching tool for the child on how life really is. It's not all sunshine and dancing with bananas! As far as I'm concerned, that OP showed poor parenting skills and, as someone else in the thread posted, seemed to whine about it, resembling a child himself!
I teach this to my boy on a regular basis. In the example of Disneyland, sometimes his fav ride has a line sometimes something is closed or whatever, he learns to deal.
Bookmarks