Re: [Unschooling-dotcom] Dialectic
Bridget E Coffman
Cute dialogs. None of them represent what I see here though. Here's how
I find the conversation here:
a. My child has Thingymabob Disorder. Has anyone got any ideas for how
to handle it?
b. Have you tried oingo-boigo therapy?We used Oingo and it helped for
Thingymabob Disorder.
c. It must be because of stress in your house.
d. Oingo didn't work for me so we went to the Dr. Watson Technique, that
helped us.
c. No one here has any problems with Thingymabob Disorder so it must be
because you don't do what I do.
e. c. must be right, I listen to her all the time and I don't have
Thingymabob Disorder,
a. Well, I've always done most of the things c. says, but in this case
circumstances don't allow it. The Thingymabob Disorder needs to be
addressed.
c. Those who do what I do aren't having any problems but those who don't
have all these difficulties. They should just listen to me.
a. Thank you b. and d. I tried both of your suggestions and found them
very helpful. One other thing I found elsewhere was the Franken Furter
Treatment. That was helpful too.
c. But you still haven't tried my way.
In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: it
goes on.
- Robert Frost
I find the conversation here:
a. My child has Thingymabob Disorder. Has anyone got any ideas for how
to handle it?
b. Have you tried oingo-boigo therapy?We used Oingo and it helped for
Thingymabob Disorder.
c. It must be because of stress in your house.
d. Oingo didn't work for me so we went to the Dr. Watson Technique, that
helped us.
c. No one here has any problems with Thingymabob Disorder so it must be
because you don't do what I do.
e. c. must be right, I listen to her all the time and I don't have
Thingymabob Disorder,
a. Well, I've always done most of the things c. says, but in this case
circumstances don't allow it. The Thingymabob Disorder needs to be
addressed.
c. Those who do what I do aren't having any problems but those who don't
have all these difficulties. They should just listen to me.
a. Thank you b. and d. I tried both of your suggestions and found them
very helpful. One other thing I found elsewhere was the Franken Furter
Treatment. That was helpful too.
c. But you still haven't tried my way.
>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> Have you seen the news of Aghanistan?
> A bird is in the yard!
> Yes, the sun just came out.
> My son hates to read.
> We love our new church.
> When I was little we lived near a church.
> The bird is splashing in the water.
>
> No disagreements.
> Also no information, and no learning.
>
> And I think there are people who would love for online discussions
> to all be
> this way:
>
> "I keep my child from wearing red because it disturbs me and I'm
> sure it
> would eventually disturb him, and if I let him wear red, I know he
> would wear
> nothing but red every day for the rest of his life."
> "You're such a good mom!"
> "Nobody knows your son like you do."
> "Maybe I'll stop letting my son wear red too."
> "What about daughters?"
> "How old was he when you realized wearing red was the source of all
> his
> learning problems?"
> "What about pink? Maroon?"
> "Your son is so lucky to have you as a mom!"
> "I wish I had kept my son from wearing red."
> "Red is the color of Satan, so you're intuitively a good mom and
> your child
> will live forever."
> "Red sets up a vibration of agitation, but there is an aromatherapy
> antidote."
> "Oh, thank you!"
> "I'm so glad I came here to discuss this!"
> "Yes, I love these deep, heartfelt discussions."
In three words I can sum up everything I've learned about life: it
goes on.
- Robert Frost