Re: [UnschoolingDiscussion] young, innocent kids wanting to watch sexually he...
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This is really true. Honest! We three saw Mean Girls on opening day --
DD14 and me, with eight-year-old DS in tow. DS isn't in the least sexually
curious, got absolutely none of the innuendo and also wasn't bothered by any of
it. He loved the movie, laughed his head off. By the way, he knows as little
about school as he does about sex or girl psychology and head games. He still
loved it -- didn't bother him in the slightest. :) JJ
p.s. It's one of those movies that could have been gross and tedious, like so
many teen movies. You can't tell from the printed recipe how the chef's
personal flair and the outstanding quality of the ingredients she hand-picked make
this movie worth seeing. Also her presentation on the plate --
DD14 and me, with eight-year-old DS in tow. DS isn't in the least sexually
curious, got absolutely none of the innuendo and also wasn't bothered by any of
it. He loved the movie, laughed his head off. By the way, he knows as little
about school as he does about sex or girl psychology and head games. He still
loved it -- didn't bother him in the slightest. :) JJ
p.s. It's one of those movies that could have been gross and tedious, like so
many teen movies. You can't tell from the printed recipe how the chef's
personal flair and the outstanding quality of the ingredients she hand-picked make
this movie worth seeing. Also her presentation on the plate --
> But the stuff I posted above...Wow, she doesn't know much about any[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
> of that at all. Maybe she's curious, maybe she's ready to start
>
> hearing about some of that, and that's cool...but all that thrown
>
> together in one movie? -=--
>
> The things you posted, not one of them is necessary to the plot. If she
> doesn't understand something, it will just go by and she won't need it
> explained
> to understand the story or the characters.
>