Links News Contact Us About us Privacy Terms FAQ Add feedback Invite a friend Bookmark
Your Ad Here Your Ad Here
Home Members Blogs Photos Videos Music Groups Classifieds Events Polls Forums Articles Boards chat
The Tantrum
4 March, 20104 March, 2010 0 comments Uncategorized Uncategorized

The Tantrum
an Embassy in London a KGB colonel puffed a cigarette as he read the handwritten notelineage 2 adena for the third time. There was no need for the writer to express regret, he though. Correcting this problem would be easy. He would do that in a moment. The thought of it caused a grim smile to appear and joy to his heart. But he pushed away those thoughts and turned his attention to a framed photograph on his desk. His wife was beautiful, he toldlotro gold himself as he remembered the day they were married. That was forty-three years ago, and it had been the proudest and happiest day of his life. What had happened to all that time? Why had it passed so quickly, and why hadn't he spent more of it with her? Why hadn't he held her close and told her more often that he loved her? He cursed himself as a tear came from the corner lotro goldof his eye, ran down his cheek, then dropped onto the note. He stiffened and wiped his face with the back of his hand. There was no need for remorse or regret, he told himself. In a few moments he would join her and at that time would express his undying love and devotion. After setting the note ablaze he dropped it into an ashtray and watched it burn. For a time the names cast moving shadows dofus kamason the walls of the darkened room, then they nickered and died out. The colonel dropped the cigarette to the floor and ground it out with his heel, then clutched the photograph to his breast, removed a pistol from his pocket, placed the barrel in his mouth and pulled the trigger. In the ashtray a small portion of thedofus kamas note remained. Where it had been wetted by his tear it had failed to bum, and on that scrap of paper were the words "died yesterday."
was born with club feet. The doctors assured us that with treatment he would eve iskbe able to walk normally - but would never run very well. The first three years of his life were spent in surgery, casts and braces. By the time he was eight, you wouldn't know he had a problem when you saw him walk . The children in our neighborhood ran around as most children do during play, and Joey would jump right in and run and play, too. Weeve isk never told him that he probably wouldn't be able to run as well as the other children. So he didn't know. n seventh grade he decided to go out for the cross-country team. Every day he trained with the team. He worked harder and ran more than any of the others - perhaps he sensed eve iskthat the abilities that seemed to come naturally to so many others did buy ffxi gilnot come naturally to him. Although the entire team runs, only the top seven runners have the potential toscore points for the school. We didn't tell him he probably would never make the team, so he didn't know. He continued to run four to five miles a day, every day - even the day he had a 103-degree fever. I was worried, so I went to look for him after school. I found him running all alone. I asked him how he felt. "Okay,"??ь? hebuy ffxi gil said. He had two more miles to go. The sweat ran down his face and his eyes were glassy from his fever. Yet he lookestraight ahead and kept running. We never told him he couldn't run four miles with a 103-degree fever. So he didn't know. Two weeks later, the names of the team runners were called. Joey was number six on the list. Joey had made the team. He was in seventh grade - the other six team buy ffxi gilmembers were all eighth-graders. We never told him he shouldn't expect to make the team. We never told him he couldn't do it. We never told him he couldn't do it...so he didn't know. He just did it.
 My mother was a vocal supporter of corporal punishment, but for all her talking she has never spanked my siblings, and me only once. Instead she found ways of punishment that left a more lasting memory then the short sting of a swat on our rumps. One of the most memorable of thesebuy ffxi gil occasions occurred when I was four. In the early 70's my mother attended college during the day while my sister was in school and I was in daycare. One day at daycare I watched an extremely tired motherRay ban glass attempt to pick up her daughter. The little girl asked, "Momma are we going to McDonalds for dinner?" The mother replied, "Honey, not tonight. Momma has to run a few errands and then we have to go home and cook dinner for Daddy." "But I wanna go." "Susie, I said not tonight. Maybe, if you are a good girl we can go tomorrow." Susie immediately true religion jeansdropped to the floor, kicking and screaming, "I want to go to McDonalds." No amount of pleading or scolding her mother tried stopped Susie's tantrum. Finally her mother gave in, "Okay, Susie, lets go to McDonalds." Susie stopped yelling and smiling she grabbed her mother's hand and they left. To say I was amazed would be inaccurate; I was delighted that anything I wanted could be had by throwing a tantrum. That day my mother picked me up early from daycare because we were going to Sears & Roebuck to pay on a Christmas Layaway. I was excited by the lights and 1decorations, and as we walked throughchristian audigier the toy section on the way to the Layaway Department, I saw a toy I had to have. It was a white and red telephone whose bells rang as it was pulled along on a string. Looking lovingly up at my mother I asked, "Mama, can I have that telephone?" She replied, "Baby, not now, but if you are a good girl maybe Santa will bring it to you." "But Mama, I want that telephone right now." Her eyes narrowed and her hand tightened on mine. "Becky, you can't have that telephone today, but if you misbehave you can have a spanking." By now we were standing in the long Holiday line in the Layaway Department, and I figure it was now or never. I lay down on the ground and began screaming, "I want that telephone," over and over again. Weary Christmas shoppers looked as my mother calmly said, "Becky, you better get up by the count of Bedroom furniturethree or else. One...Two...Three." She stood, and brushed herself off. At first stunned, the others waiting in line began to sporadically clap, and before I knew it they were cheering and laughing and patting my mother on her back. She blushed and took a little bow and the next thirty minutes in line was pure misery for me as various parents leaving the Layaway Department, shake their heads at me and say with a smile, "Your mom got you good. I bet you'll never try that again." And I didn't, because it left a lasting mental picture more effective then any physical mark.

TagsTags:  
Comments
  • There are no comments yet

Description
tiankong6
Posts: 14
Comments: 2
profoundly unhappy. In such cases it would seem as if the fault must lie with a wrong theory as to how to live. In one sense, we may say that any theory as
Categories
Tags
Your Ad Here Your Ad Here
Copyright © 2012 Your Company.
If it was so, it might be; and if it were so,it would be; but as it isn' t, it ain' t. That's logic.
Lewis Carrol