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I know we all have the thought.. Follow

#27 Sep 02 2009 at 4:24 PM Rating: Good
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4,512 posts
Katielynn wrote:
This. I would never slap a child, let alone someone elses. I might get frustrated, want to walk over and scream back at the kid, but I would never.


Katielynn wrote:
I know we all have the thought to beat other people's wild and unruly children,


Katielynn wrote:
I'm here to call them liars.


Sometimes the posts just write themselves.
#28 Sep 02 2009 at 5:05 PM Rating: Excellent
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383 posts
Kavekk the Ludicrous wrote:
Annabella, Goblin in Disguise wrote:
I imagine doing crafts with random children. Like grabbing a bunch of discontented kids and we'd all make potholders or macaroni art.


You're a danger to society.


One day, though, society will acknowledge every person's right to glue macaroni and glitter on random children.
#29 Sep 03 2009 at 11:27 PM Rating: Excellent
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drachechan of the Seven Seas wrote:
Kavekk the Ludicrous wrote:
Annabella, Goblin in Disguise wrote:
I imagine doing crafts with random children. Like grabbing a bunch of discontented kids and we'd all make potholders or macaroni art.


You're a danger to society.


One day, though, society will acknowledge every person's right to glue macaroni and glitter on random children.

The tiny minority of pedophiles have stolen our children from us. Children are glorious and wonderful, and I think it's a right and a responsibility to step in and help a child in difficulty or who is having even a small worry. And kids and adults would be all better off if they could step into each other's circles, and play with each other in a free moment. Not only would it be happiness making for both, but both can learn from the other.

But because we're all concerned about the predators, outsiders to a nuclear family feel like they can't step in on those little moments when children have wandered away from their parents, but are looking for or needing adult company or rescue any more. It's a horrible, horrible shame.

I can remember being 3, and losing my mother in the supermarket, and what felt like the endless and depthless terror of searching and searching and searching and not finding her, and the silent scream of horror of thinking I'd not see her again.
#30 Sep 03 2009 at 11:33 PM Rating: Good
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3,829 posts
Katielynn wrote:
because they do not release the folical is unable turn into progesterone that produces corpus lupus that in short begins my period after it disappears.

1. Pituitary Gland malfunctions, forgets to tell follicle to release the egg.

2. Failed release means the folicle is unable to change into a progesterone.


Forgive me, but no.

The follicle, after releasing the ova, becomes the corpus luteum, which then produces progesterone. The follicle does not "become progesterone" that produces "corpus lupus."

Thank you. Carry on.
#31 Sep 03 2009 at 11:49 PM Rating: Good
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3,829 posts
Aripyanfar wrote:

But because we're all concerned about the predators, outsiders to a nuclear family feel like they can't step in on those little moments when children have wandered away from their parents, but are looking for or needing adult company or rescue any more. It's a horrible, horrible shame.


Mr. Ambrya actually found himself--through no fault of his own--facing this problem. When he first moved into this house, he was doing a lot of painting and repairs. He's under the sink doing some plumbing and hears a sound, looks up, and lo and behold it's the neighbor's toddler, who had wandered in through the door which had been left open because of paint fumes. So he takes the tot and guides him out the door, back to his own house, rings the doorbell and asks the woman who answers if she's lost something. The woman (we won't go into the fact that she somehow failed to notice her two year old made it outside the house and outside the yard without her even realizing it) looks at him like he's Jack the Ripper, snatches the child away from him, slams the door on him, and thereafter spends the next two years avoiding him like the plague whenever they happen to be outside their houses at the same time.

As for hitting other people's children, anyone who tries it will draw back a bloody stump. I actually had to get between my white trash cousin and Tristan (then 14-months) at my brother's wedding last summer. She has no problem casually smacking her kids when they act up, which drives the entire family nuts and in turns drives me nuts because NO ONE SAYS ANYTHING. I don't know if she mistook Tristan (unlikely--his clothes were actually clean) for one of her brood or just didn't see the need to make the distinction. He got into her purse, which she had left sitting in the middle of the floor where all the kids were running around, and I was heading over to stop him and help him put things away, but then she came toward him with her hand drawn back. At which time I got between them, got right up in her face, and informed her in no uncertain terms (and I quote) "If you lay a finger on my son, I will fucking. kill. you."

She left the wedding shortly thereafter. Can't imagine why.



Edited, Sep 4th 2009 12:50am by Ambrya
#32 Sep 04 2009 at 12:23 AM Rating: Good
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15,952 posts
Ambrya wrote:
Aripyanfar wrote:

But because we're all concerned about the predators, outsiders to a nuclear family feel like they can't step in on those little moments when children have wandered away from their parents, but are looking for or needing adult company or rescue any more. It's a horrible, horrible shame.


Mr. Ambrya actually found himself--through no fault of his own--facing this problem. When he first moved into this house, he was doing a lot of painting and repairs. He's under the sink doing some plumbing and hears a sound, looks up, and lo and behold it's the neighbor's toddler, who had wandered in through the door which had been left open because of paint fumes. So he takes the tot and guides him out the door, back to his own house, rings the doorbell and asks the woman who answers if she's lost something. The woman (we won't go into the fact that she somehow failed to notice her two year old made it outside the house and outside the yard without her even realizing it) looks at him like he's Jack the Ripper, snatches the child away from him, slams the door on him, and thereafter spends the next two years avoiding him like the plague whenever they happen to be outside their houses at the same time.


Whereas that moment at the door COULD have been the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Or at least the beginning of a beautiful occasional cup-of-sugar, lawn-mower, pet-sitting, car-sitting and package delivery relationship.
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