your twenty-something child
still values your opinion
on any matter whatsoever.
-$Zero...
boring boring boring boring boring boring
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.writing/msg/c7b7ab9a8b4280fd
Because there's only so much time in a minute!
http://itsazenthinger.com
> you know you've failed as a parent when...
>
> your twenty-something child still values your opinion on any matter whatsoever.
Holy shit Zero, this is cynical, wrong, and just plain ugly on so many
levels. Now, if you had written, "you know you've failed as a parent
when your twenty-something child *cannot possibly survive without
totally depending on* your opinion, then okay, you'd be right, without a
doubt. But valuing a parent's opinion is a sign of failure on the part
of parenting?
What a ungodly sad perception.
~ ~ ~
PJ
Really. Clearly it should be...
when your twenty-something child will admit that he/she values your
opinion on any matter whatsoever.
Susan >^. .^<
then i've succeeded where so many others have failed.
cool.
> Now, if you had written, "you know you've failed as a parent
> when your twenty-something child *cannot possibly survive without
> totally depending on* your opinion, then okay, you'd be right, without a
> doubt. But valuing a parent's opinion is a sign of failure on the part
> of parenting?
>
> What a ungodly sad perception.
shouldn't you have used the word "an" instead of "a"?
anyway, i've reworded it since last version:
you know you've failed in
your parental responsibilities
when...
your twenty-something child
still values your opinion
about anything whatsoever.
there.
how's that?
better?
-$Zero...
http://IsThisARhetoricalQuestion.com
all i got for Christmas was my two front teeth knocked out.
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.writing/msg/84a6f228d2b59cc5
> you know you've failed as a parent when...
>
> your twenty-something child
> still values your opinion
> on any matter whatsoever.
That sounds more like a teenager, pretending as hard as they can that
they don't care.
I'd say it's around our 20s that we start to realize and admit our
parents' opinions may have some value.
--
It's All About We! (the column)
http://www.serenebabe.net/ - new 1/2
No, you've just taught them properly to be condescending.
Or they want money.
DB
is that what you did as a teen-ager?
> I'd say it's around our 20s that we start to realize and
> admit our parents' opinions may have some value.
that all depends on the parents, surely.
-$Zero...
flag on the play!
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.writing/msg/cf203f528145c26c
Because there's only so much time in a minute.
http://MustReadBloggers.com
LOL!
> Or they want money.
one thing i've definitely taught my kids is the value of money.
-$Zero...
then i've succeeded where so many others have failed. cool.
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.writing/msg/e4799ef44b645bdc
I value my mom's opinion when she's right. When she's wrong, not so
much.
LOL
--
Ray
> you know you've failed as a parent when...
>
> your twenty-something child
> still values your opinion
> on any matter whatsoever.
That's scary.
<considering>
Cheer up! I figured it out! You've been Eddie Haskell-ed!
--
Sylvia
> On Jan 4, 7:50 pm, serenebabe <sereneb...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On 2009-01-04 17:34:32 -0500, "$Zero" <zeroi...@gmail.com> said:
>>
>>> you know you've failed as a parent when...
>>
>>> your twenty-something child
>>> still values your opinion
>>> on any matter whatsoever.
>>
>> That sounds more like a teenager, pretending as hard
>> as they can that they don't care.
>
> is that what you did as a teen-ager?
Yes.
>> I'd say it's around our 20s that we start to realize and
>> admit our parents' opinions may have some value.
>
> that all depends on the parents, surely.
The value might be that there is something with which the youngster
totally disagrees, though.
that's fascinating to me.
because it's not my experience at all.
at least not that i can recall.
so what did you put so much effort into pretending that you didn't
care about?
> >> I'd say it's around our 20s that we start to realize and
> >> admit our parents' opinions may have some value.
>
> > that all depends on the parents, surely.
>
> The value might be that there is something with which the
> youngster totally disagrees, though.
like what?
-$Zero...
What we can learn from spaghetti sauce
http://groups.google.com/group/misc.writing/msg/1933d46c59c264ce