Hi, everyone!
I’m impressed with your great experiences on your child rearing. I think it’s sure that your deep love had been understood by your children. Anyway, doing mother is a hard training for us, isn’t it?
Now it’s time to watch my favorite TV drama. I think I will be able to have more time to think and write deeply from tomorrow. More of this story will be told next. Good night!
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4 comments:
Dear Cherry and friends,
Hello.
While I was reading stories written by Plum and Magnolia, I was moved to tears. Although I've never had an experience of rearing kids, I could feel your frustration and irritation in your expression.
Until recently, I sometimes accused my parents of immatureness.
I always criticized that they didn't know how to give children proper education. What a conceited daughter I am!
But some one told me, there is no parents who have enough experience to rear children. That's true. I should have imagined how my grandparents raised my parents. Maybe they just fed them. They had neither resources nor knowledge to properly educate children.
Well, I have to go to the bank, now.
Talk to you later.
Dear Cherry and friends
I am going to Toyama city to attend the memorial service for my deceased mother. When I was young, I also argued against what she had preached me. She was very positive and active housewife, so she very often disputed with my father. Nevertheless, she expected her daughters to be modest and submissive ladies. Now I am missing whole things of her. I loved my mother, of course loved my father, too. I can believe now they had done their best for their children. I really appreciate their affection for me.
Writer, Teru Miyamoto wrote stories of the colorful lives of his parents’ and their unusual life-style which severely affected the writer’s life itself since his childhood. He mentioned that he can stand on his own feet as a writer thanks to their affectionate influence. Bye friends, see you again!
Hi, there.
I'm subscribing to daily news from the Independent and The New York Times. I only check a few news headlines. Today, I noticed a horrible headline and read the whole article. The Independent is collecting petition now. I sent a petition through the Internet, because I couldn't help doing it.
If you have time, please have a look. The final line of the article is the link to sign petition.
I will attach the summary below.
Jump to the article.
"A young man, a student of journalism, is sentenced to death by an Islamic court for downloading a report from the internet. The sentence is then upheld by the country's rulers. This is Afghanistan ? not in Taliban times but six years after "liberation" and under the democratic rule of
the West's ally Hamid Karzai."
Hi, everyone!!!
I saw the coming of spring in the sunlight of this afternoon, which was so bright and extremely brilliant. Yes, spring is coming, though very slowly but steadily.
Today I began to read an article about Beatrice Webb, which is exciting and I just cannot put it down. I was always interested in this English woman, but it took a long time to come to read this article. But anyway I am enjoying this short writing, and I will just let you know about her. The following is from Wikipedia.
Martha Beatrice Potter Webb (January 22, 1858 - April 30, 1943) was a British socialist, economist and reformer, usually referred to in the same breath as her husband, Sidney Webb. Although her husband became Baron Passfield in 1929, she refused to be known as Lady Passfield.
Here is some more information about Mrs. Webb.
Beatrice Webb was born in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, the granddaughter of a Radical MP, Richard Potter. In 1882, she had a relationship with Radical politician Joseph Chamberlain, by then a Cabinet minister. This was a failure, and in 1890 she was introduced to Sidney Webb, whose help she sought in research she was carrying out for her cousin, Charles Booth's Life and Labour of the People of London.
Marrying Sidney in 1892, the two remained together. Beatrice was an active partner in all Sidney's political and professional activities, including the organisation of the Fabian Society and the establishment of the London School of Economics. She co-authored books such as the History of Trade Unionism (1894), and was co-founder of the New Statesman magazine (1913).
Interesting, isn’t it?
Well, I will talk to you again tomorrow, my lovely friends. I really want to finish reading this article tonight. Bye for now, my precious friends.
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