I’m an older millennial. We had a pretty great run.
We grew up with actual childhoods before everything moved online, but we still got the internet early enough to understand it before it took over everything. We had landlines, AIM, mall culture, good music, and just enough technology to make life fun without making it weird.
Old enough to remember life before smartphones. Young enough to adapt to all of it.
That was a sweet spot.
Idk what MOM needs to hear this, but
your 12-year-old daughter does NOT need a full face of makeup, crop tops, the latest iPhone, or acrylics.
She is a CHILD.
@RaminNasibov It would’ve been news in 2010-2015
I’ve noticed that a lot. They bring out new info on things from so long ago that it’s past the point of anyone caring.
when sylvia plath wrote ‘please don’t expect me to always be good and kind and loving. there are times when i will be cold and thoughtless and hard to understand’ I felt that
At 40, Franz Kafka (1883-1924), who never married and had no children, walked through the park in Berlin when he met a girl who was crying because she had lost her favourite doll. She and Kafka searched for the doll unsuccessfully. Kafka told her to meet him there the next day and they would come back to look for her.
The next day, when they had not yet found the doll, Kafka gave the girl a letter “written” by the doll saying “please don’t cry. I took a trip to see the world. I will write to you about my adventures.”
Thus began a story which continued until the end of Kafka’s life.
During their meetings, Kafka read the letters of the doll carefully written with adventures and conversations that the girl found adorable.
Finally, Kafka brought back the doll (he bought one) that had returned. “It doesn’t look like my doll at all,“ said the girl.
Kafka handed her another letter in which the doll wrote: "my travels have changed me.” the little girl hugged the new doll and brought her happy home.
A year later Kafka died. Many years later, the now-adult girl found a letter inside the doll. In the tiny letter signed by Kafka it was written:
“Everything you love will probably be lost, but in the end, love will return in another way.”
Ellen Page plays a 16-year-old girl tortured in a basement. Catherine Keener is the mother who let it happen. Based on a true story. The real girl was burned, branded and beaten for 3 months. The movie watered it down. It's still the hardest thing I've ever watched.💔
Honestly, I don’t get the nepotism argument. I think it’s undeniable that Miley embodied Hannah effortlessly, and it’s just hard to picture anyone else in that role. For starters, she had an incredibly distinctive voice that didn’t sound like anyone else. And her charisma is just better than the average teen
@PopDrug She’s 41 and he’s 54 for anyone wondering. That means they’re both a decade younger in biological age, although I’m unsure how that result is calculated or how accurate it is.
Please join me in prayers pls .
This mom has lost her first son 8 months ago .
Now this child is very sick .
Let’s put our hands together to pray that ,
Aliyn will be healed .
That God will touch Aliyn , with his healing hands in Jesus name Amen
Pls help me share thanks we need every one to pray