I told a parent that her kid was falling asleep in my class, and she said "Oh, she's on her phone all night, I just don't know what to do!" Erm, perhaps take her phone away? Because you are the freaking adult?
I told a parent that her kid was falling asleep in my class, and she said "Oh, she's on her phone all night, I just don't know what to do!" Erm, perhaps take her phone away? Because you are the freaking adult?
Well that's just, like, your opinion, man.
Also, our national motto is 'No-one hurts me and gets away with it'. Feeling so patriotic right now!
It's from Extras, where he played a sex obsessed version of himself.
It looks somewhat like an elephant.
Thanks!
I can make a connection with hard to reach, 'difficult' kids pretty quickly.
Well done you! My grandpa saved a friend from drowning when he was a young man and got a fancy ass certificate from the local council, which my mum still has hanging in her house. You should have gotten a fancy ass certificate too!
I used to work in a cafe that mostly had pensioners as customers - our oldest customers were a couple in their nineties, who'd been married 70 years and who walked everywhere holding hands. They used to sit on the same side of the table and hold hands while they drank coffee and shared a slice of cake. So so sweet.
Never heard this before - it's beautiful!
So sorry for your loss.
So much this. Was just going to post that.
But you haven't defined what objective morals are, or where they come from.
Also, I didn't say morality was wholly subjective.
I guess you'd have to define what objective morality is then. Do you believe that morality is the exact same for all people, or that there's some 'ultimate morality' which exists independently of culture or individuals?
That's ... a leap.
'Brave' is set in Scotland dude.
Well, to an extent - if it's influenced by your environment (family/friends/schooling/religion or lack of/socio-economic background/country/etc) then a person's morality will naturally be not wholly subjective in general.