[email protected]

In a message dated 10/5/2003 11:57:27 PM Eastern Standard Time,
[email protected] writes:

> On NPR radio, a psychological program was on one Sunday evening,
> citing the "fact" that imaginary friends are very normal, and not to
> worry about. The imaginary friends will go away by about age five.
>
>
> !!!!!!?????
>
> really? LOL then my kids are slow, too, because my almost 11 year old
> boy has "10,000 robots" (who, btw, all get to vote, when we're
> deciding Rummikubes or Kings in the Corner) and my 9 year old girl has
> robots, too. Enemy robots and friend robots. Always battling things
> out, not infrequently, in the grocery store with LOTS of noise. LOL
>
> My 15 year old had a goblin named Rover until she was about 10.
>
> slow kids. tut.
>
> ;)
>

My son had squirrels living in his hair until recently. I think there were 18
of them, plus a badger and some other critters. A few were hideously
malformed in some way, and some of them weren't quite sane. We had conversations with
the squirrels.

Julian's 14 now. The squirrels were here until about six months ago. I miss
them, although Julian doesn't.

When Julian was little he had a (male) imaginary friend named Tanya who was
dead. Except that he talked to him. We wondered whether we should call the
Center for Grieving Children so he could get support for the loss of his dead
imaginary friend, except that Tanya was dead from the beginning...

Oh, never mind. He's just a weird kid.

Kathryn


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Heidi

ROFLOL LMHO...I and my daughter are laughing SO HARD...hee hee

squirrels in his hair has GOT to be the best imaginary friends I've
ever heard of! LOL

HeidiC :)


> My son had squirrels living in his hair until recently. I think
there were 18
> of them, plus a badger and some other critters. A few were
hideously
> malformed in some way, and some of them weren't quite sane. We had
conversations with
> the squirrels.
>
> Julian's 14 now. The squirrels were here until about six months
ago. I miss
> them, although Julian doesn't.
>
> When Julian was little he had a (male) imaginary friend named Tanya
who was
> dead. Except that he talked to him. We wondered whether we should
call the
> Center for Grieving Children so he could get support for the loss
of his dead
> imaginary friend, except that Tanya was dead from the beginning...
>
> Oh, never mind. He's just a weird kid.
>
> Kathryn
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]