That's awesome, but there's one little thing. Inertial dampeners?I like the short raps that she does. This is the first clip I saw of hers, and it was an instant subscribe.
That's awesome, but there's one little thing. Inertial dampeners?I like the short raps that she does. This is the first clip I saw of hers, and it was an instant subscribe.
I thought it was "dampeners" rather than "dampers." Not finding a quick answer on the ole Google, or even YouTube.That's awesome, but there's one little thing. Inertial dampeners?
It's a common malapropism, to use one of Elle's favorite words. A shock absorber on a car is a damper. A baby installed in a diaper is a dampener.I thought it was "dampeners" rather than "dampers." Not finding a quick answer on the ole Google, or even YouTube.
Also, Elle's Jurassic Park rap is a fun one too.
You existed here before some of us.It would be good to have a written confirmation that I existed here before some of you just like you have the written confirmation that you are "notable posters".
Maybe they will pay a consulting firm $500K to try and find out why.
Probably a good thing. 'Your child is a blot on the landscape destined to bring destruction and misery to all they touch. If they could briefly look beyond the end of their nose and realise the wider world doesn't require them to shout 'six-seven' to all and sundry, the lives of those around them could be considered greatly enriched. They also need to realise that, as a fifteen-year-old, they do need to write in full sentences and not merely fragments. The examiner is not clairvoyant; although this has been pointed out to your child ad nauseum, they still believe Clair Voyant to be the name of the person marking their work.'I miss the days when teachers could write what they liked about a student. I recall reading that Dame Judi Dench's report from her headmaster (at
The Mount School, York) read: "Judi would be a very good pupil if she lived in this world."
Need I say more?![]()
Congrats! Have a beer to celebrate.Wanted to acknowledge a small personal victory today. It's been a month since I last had a drink. I wasn't planning to quit and I'm not necessarily looking to make it a permanent change, but it felt like the right move at the time. So yeah, sorta mildly happy about that.
Probably a good thing. 'Your child is a blot on the landscape destined to bring destruction and misery to all they touch. If they could briefly look beyond the end of their nose and realise the wider world doesn't require them to shout 'six-seven' to all and sundry, the lives of those around them could be considered greatly enriched. They also need to realise that, as a fifteen-year-old, they do need to write in full sentences and not merely fragments. The examiner is not clairvoyant; although this has been pointed out to your child ad nauseum, they still believe Clair Voyant to be the name of the person marking their work.'
Ten years in to exactly the same (plus law) and I share the sentiments all round. Although the way pressure has shifted from students to teachers is problematic. It's on us to get results, rather than on students to do the sodding work. One conversation with a deputy head recently asked me what I was doing to get a small hardcore of internal truants into history. Seeing as I have no idea why they chose to truant the subject in the first place, having never taught them until September and having not seen them since the last week in the same, having liaised with their head of year, my head of faculty, my head of department, their parents, the pastoral year group managers, the same deputy head and the school chaplaincy (as I felt divine intervention might be the next step needed), I have started to run a bit short of ideas as these students continue to just miss lessons *without any kind of sanction from those higher up the pay scale than I*. Their reports would read: 'Possibly a nice student with capability, not that I would know as I've been in their company slightly less than three ministers of state this year.'I actually think that would be an awesome report. *nod* I wish some schools and principals would allow teachers to write reports like that! Some parents (not all) need to learn the truth about their crotch-goblins - that they are sticky-handed, fast-running, unable-to-communicate-clearly wastes of space with voices like foghorns.
Of course, not all kids are like that, just not all parents are paranoid obsessive helicopter-parents (or racist ignorant bigots), not all principals are incessantly worried about PR and how to get the budget for next year, and not all school superintendents are pains-in-the-ass. But enough of them are. And they all vote ... and procreate.
And that's such a sad state of affairs, I think I'd rather be dipped in honey and set upon by bears than try to teach the little monsters. Which is a shame, because I've spent 25 years teaching myself history, which is something I'd like to pass on to the next generation. But only if they're willing to learn ... *sigh*
Anyway, sorry for the rant. Back to our previously scheduled programming.![]()
One conversation with a deputy head recently asked me what I was doing to get a small hardcore of internal truants into history. Seeing as I have no idea why they chose to truant the subject in the first place, having never taught them until September and having not seen them since the last week in the same, having liaised with their head of year, my head of faculty, my head of department, their parents, the pastoral year group managers, the same deputy head and the school chaplaincy (as I felt divine intervention might be the next step needed), I have started to run a bit short of ideas as these students continue to just miss lessons *without any kind of sanction from those higher up the pay scale than I*. Their reports would read: 'Possibly a nice student with capability, not that I would know as I've been in their company slightly less than three ministers of state this year.'
Anyway. Happy. The youngest child's bedroom is finally being plastered and decorated, and it's an old school friend doing it. It should be nice to catch up.
You have nothing to worry about Graham, most conservatives want to be that way because they find the thinking behind far left liberal policies are less tolerable and harder to live with than the thinking behind far right policies. I know politics are off limits here, but that's my observation.I've been a regular at my local YMCA for more than four years now. When I began going regularly I noticed a guy in probably his late 40s, who worked out regularly with weights, and who owned a tree service, so he did a lot of climbing. In other words, a very muscular guy. Who also, when I first saw him, wore a bright red politically-oriented hat. A brand of politics that rather stood out in this university city which as a distinct political tilt away from that brand. The muscles rippling underneath that hat struck me as signifying a dangerous character
At first I avoided much contact with him, but as the years went by we began to talk about trees and about other things. And I noticed the hat had disappeared, replaced by neutral hats. And I enjoyed our conversations.
Today I wore t-shirt I had picked up at the local thrift store, a shirt that reads, "Due process means/you don't punish first/you prove it first." When he read the shirt he said, "I agree with that."
Which triggered my curiosity, since that seems to come from the other side of the political spectrum than that generally associated with his original hat.
So I tentatively asked him about that hat and its underlying philosophy. He said that the hat still reflected his political philosophy, but he had stopped wearing it because of member complaints about it.
We didn't go any further into politics, dancing around the risk of provoking any sort of political argument.
We separated for the day shortly afterward, after I thanked him for accepting my queries, and for showing me that even in this hyper-charged environment people can see each other as human beings first.
Even though I have serious misgivings about his political views, and see them as dangerously to one side of the political spectrum, I've seen him in the community with his elderly mother, and seen him as a kind person whom I enjoy talking with on everything other than politics.
And that makes me happy.