Xerox Post

Aug 21, 2003 23:36

hillhouse posted this today, and she got it off of unvollendete80. I liked it a lot, so here I am plastering it across your friend's page. If I had one nitpick with it, it is a little bit heavy handed in the learning department. The suggestion to strive for learning defeats the whole purpose of accepting the "here" rather than the "there" which I think if you just keep ( Read more... )

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Comments 6

misshavisham August 22 2003, 01:29:07 UTC
14. You can remember any time you wish . . .

You got that right. I just added it to my memories : )

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flipped August 24 2003, 18:14:08 UTC
I always forgot about that memory stuff and fight back the urge to post stuff like this I see in other people's journals in my own.

I'll have to try to keep that in mind next time.

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alabina August 22 2003, 08:31:30 UTC
I really liked "There is no right or wrong, but there are consequences."

That's pretty much the way I raised my kids, and they turned out very "right". They fully understood the consequences, but knew they were free to make their own decisions.

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Re: flipped August 24 2003, 18:17:43 UTC
It seems like a good way to go. I'd think it would instill a certain level of curiousity too about trying new things just to see how they work. We tend to stick with what doesn't work too long, I think.

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bienvenida August 24 2003, 02:11:10 UTC
That is very well written. Any idea of who the original author is?
They have lived a lot of life, whoever it is.

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flipped August 24 2003, 18:21:22 UTC
unvollendete80 posted that he saw it on usenet a few years back and tucked it away on his computer for safe keeping. It didn't look like he knew who the original author was.

Too bad. We could of hunted him or her down and demanded a few more nuggets of wisdom. ;)

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