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Though it lasts but a moment, the happiest time of your life... :-)
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2001 10:24 am
by Shadow Sandrock
Well after feeling really depressed and sleepless just 12 hours ago, I am now happier than I ever was before.
Why?
Last year I went to this school... I really liked it a whole lot... but I couldn't go back this year... but I just found out I can go back... back to all my friends and everything! I hope they have an opening
I am now happier than I ever was in my life. Now that I can be free again. Free to live my life the way things are supposed to be!
What was the happiest moment of your childhood life? Just wonderin', that's all, wanted to vent my happiness and make it into a discussion topic.
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2001 10:38 am
by fable
In school, my happiest moment was graduation. I loathed the place.
In childhood, there were many. I suspect the most pleasing was when I was about 5, and realized that all the shops flashing neon-signs in NYC were inhabited by real people, with lives all their own, completely different from mine. Suddenly, the world felt very rich.
[ 10-05-2001: Message edited by: fable ]
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2001 10:42 am
by C Elegans
Congrats, Sandrock, I'm happy to hear you can go back to all your friends
Happiest moment of my childhood? Oh, there are many...but I'm too old to remember them now
I was very happy when my paternal grandfather taught me to paint (he was an artist). I made my first oil on canvas when I was 4 - it's not exactly a masterpiece
Actually, I was happy whenever I was with him, he was a very imaginative person and always came up with a lot of funny ideas
I was always very happy when my maternal grandfather and I was hiking in the forests in the north of Sweden, where they had their summer house. We used to look at plants and animals, and it was always very exciting if you saw an elk or a bear
In all, I was a very happy kid, I liked school, I had many friends and my family was great

Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2001 10:48 am
by C Elegans
Originally posted by fable:
<STRONG>Graduation. I loathed school.

</STRONG>
I was very happy as a child, but I wasn't happy as a teenager. By the time I graduated from school, I also loathed it. At the graduation day, I stood in the middle of the schoolyard and burned my diploma

Oh, the sense of freedom and joy

Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2001 10:54 am
by fable
Originally posted by C Elegans:
<STRONG>I was very happy as a child, but I wasn't happy as a teenager. By the time I graduated from school, I also loathed it. At the graduation day, I stood in the middle of the schoolyard and burned my diploma

Oh, the sense of freedom and joy

</STRONG>
LOL, good for you! I had to put up with many teachers who constantly reprimanded and punished me for simply thinking. One teacher gave me a poor grade because he said I was overqualified for the class. (Just try to figure that one out.) Another asked me once why I was staring into space, and I replied that I had finished the test. He then made me retake the test, to consume the rest of the class time. A third gave me a failing grade because I disagreed with Descartes' famous axiom. A fourth lowered my grade because he said my writing style, though very good, wasn't mass market enough, and that he had to get me to change it now.
As you might imagine, I developed a very healthy respect for home schooling. But I suppose little is to be expected of a profession that pays one-third or less of the salary most electricians or plumbers get, not to mention bankers or managers.
[ 10-05-2001: Message edited by: fable ]
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2001 11:18 am
by C Elegans
Originally posted by fable:
<STRONG>LOL, good for you! I had to put up with many teachers who constantly reprimanded and punished me for simply thinking. One teacher gave me a poor grade because he said I was overqualified for the class. (Just try to figure that one out.) Another asked me once why I was staring into space, and I replied that I had finished the test. He then made me retake the test, to consume the rest of the class time. A third gave me a failing grade because I disagreed with Descartes' famous axiom. A fourth lowered my grade because he said my writing style, though very good, wasn't mass market enough, and that he had to get me to change it now.</STRONG>

I recognize your story from many of my friends and fellow students and colleagues. Initiative and independent thinking are frequently not only ignored, but actually punished in Western schools. (I'm not sure what it's like in other parts of the world.)
I was very lucky. My school was a small one, and teachers had an individual contact with all the pupils. My teachers understood my needs, and I was allowed to read ahead by myself, to go to higher classes for maths, English and some other subjects. When we had individual assignments in class I always finished before my classmates, and then I was usually given more assignments, or I helped out the others. So I think my school was far better than most in this respect.
Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2001 11:14 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Originally posted by C Elegans:
<STRONG>I was very happy when my paternal grandfather taught me to paint (he was an artist). I made my first oil on canvas when I was 4 - it's not exactly a masterpiece
Actually, I was happy whenever I was with him, he was a very imaginative person and always came up with a lot of funny ideas

</STRONG>
I was always very happy when around my Uncle. He, too, was an artist. He and I were always very very close. One of, if not the saddest day of my life, was Oct. 3rd, 1996 when, at about 9AM, I found out he had died at 8:30AM. The 'freaky' thing in this, showing how close we were, is that when he died, I felt that it had happened. I wasn't sure what had happened, but I knew something had happened. I felt it in my heart. 30 minutes later, my dad arrived at my school and picked me up so me, him, and my mom could leave and go to Dallas where my Uncle had lived. Though saddened by losing him, it was also a happy day for me. My Uncle had AIDs and had been suffering for a couple months from a cancer that is caused by AIDs. I felt happy when he died because I knew he was no longer suffering. I knew that he is now in Heaven with God and now knows eternal joy and peace. You can state your opinions all you want about your belief that God doesn't exist, just expect intense flames if it is in anyway responding to this(meaning it's best to keep those statements out of this topic altogether).
Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2001 12:05 pm
by Aegis
@Fable & CE: I'm currently going through the same thing you two experianced with your schooling. I have gotten in trouble so many times for speaking my mind, expressing my veiws, and talking about very controversial things. I have marks deducted because I was "not acting withen school parametres". In other words, I was trying to be myself. I have gotten in trouble because I was wearing sunglasses on the back of my head (I have no case for them, and it's easier then leaving them in my locker) because it wasn't part of the school uniform, eyt for somereason watches necklaces and other such nic-naks are. It's funny, the more you want to be unique, and different, the more a school want's you to conform and be like everybody else.. Kind've sucks.
Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2001 12:20 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Originally posted by Aegis:
<STRONG>@Fable & CE: I'm currently going through the same thing you two experianced with your schooling. I have gotten in trouble so many times for speaking my mind, expressing my veiws, and talking about very controversial things. I have marks deducted because I was "not acting withen school parametres". In other words, I was trying to be myself. I have gotten in trouble because I was wearing sunglasses on the back of my head (I have no case for them, and it's easier then leaving them in my locker) because it wasn't part of the school uniform, eyt for somereason watches necklaces and other such nic-naks are. It's funny, the more you want to be unique, and different, the more a school want's you to conform and be like everybody else.. Kind've sucks.</STRONG>
I've had many of the same problems in school. I often would speak up to correct grammar mistakes, math mistakes, etc(depending on the class) that the teacher made. I've only had one teacher, an English(grammar/spelling/etc) teacher, that didn't get mad at me for it. He was also the teacher I had the one time I was wrong. The boy behind me insulted me, saying something like "Of course you're wrong, idiot." Mr. Ivy(my English teacher) heard him and reprimanded him and even said, "Miss Hotaru is better at English than anyone else in this class, especially you." There was another time when we had a sub in that class. We were also going to have that sub in that class the next week. The sub wrongfully punished me(even sent me to the Principle's office) for something that aforementioned kid was doing. I told Mr. Ivy and he fired that sub because of the way he treated me. *sigh* Too bad all teachers ain't be like him. Not only was he the kindest teacher I've ever had, he was the also the hottest teacher I've ever had.

Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2001 1:02 pm
by Darkpoet
Errrr I hated school, it was just being inside the building. Until I started to writing, High school was better. I didn't like being inside though.
Posted: Sat Oct 06, 2001 3:43 pm
by Aegis
the only part of school I don't like is the the dumb-ass teachers. Granted there are good ones, but half of them don't give a damn about the student.
Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2001 9:03 pm
by C Elegans
Originally posted by Aegis:
<STRONG>@Fable & CE: I'm currently going through the same thing you two experianced with your schooling. I have gotten in trouble so many times for speaking my mind, expressing my veiws, and talking about very controversial things. I have marks deducted because I was "not acting withen school parametres". In other words, I was trying to be myself. I have gotten in trouble because I was wearing sunglasses on the back of my head (I have no case for them, and it's easier then leaving them in my locker) because it wasn't part of the school uniform, eyt for somereason watches necklaces and other such nic-naks are. It's funny, the more you want to be unique, and different, the more a school want's you to conform and be like everybody else.. Kind've sucks.</STRONG>
Sucks sweat from dead mens' toes, as on of friends usually says. (It sound funnier in Swedish.)
Sometimes I wonder whether the primary function of school is gaining knowledge or being shaped into a conform, nicely adapted production unit.
Aegis, I recognize this crap very well from my own time in school. My solution to the problem was to always make home assignments, tests and exams extremely well, and then the teachers had no other choice than giving me high marks.
If you plan to go on to university, which I hope you do, it's getting better once there. Independent thinking and individuality get more accepted the higher the education is. And at the highest levels, independent thinking is a
must.
You can also do what I did - check out the possibilities to skip school and take the necessary exams for higher education as a "privatist". I don't know about Canada, but in Sweden, you can take oral and written exams too prove you have the required knowledge in a certain topic.
Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2001 9:07 pm
by Darkpoet
Originally posted by C Elegans:
<STRONG>Sucks sweat from dead mens' toes, as on of friends usually says. (It sound funnier in Swedish.)
Sometimes I wonder whether the primary function of school is gaining knowledge or being shaped into a conform, nicely adapted production unit.
Aegis, I recognize this crap very well from my own time in school. My solution to the problem was to always make home assignments, tests and exams extremely well, and then the teachers had no other choice than giving me high marks.
If you plan to go on to university, which I hope you do, it's getting better once there. Independent thinking and individuality get more accepted the higher the education is. And at the highest levels, independent thinking is a
must.
You can also do what I did - check out the possibilities to skip school and take the necessary exams for higher education as a "privatist". I don't know about Canada, but in Sweden, you can take oral and written exams too prove you have the required knowledge in a certain topic.</STRONG>
Hmmmmmmmmm that's is a new one a sweating dead man. LOL that is funny CE

Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2001 9:15 pm
by Aegis
It seems everything thing these days, that is run by the Gov't, is just to get the younger gen. to conform and become a model person... what a load of crap... Fight the power!

Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2001 9:17 pm
by Darkpoet
Originally posted by Aegis:
<STRONG>It seems everything thing these days, that is run by the Gov't, is just to get the younger gen. to conform and become a model person... what a load of crap... Fight the power!

</STRONG>
A van pulls up, on the side says "Dp the Arms dealer"
What do you want, a long arm or a short one?

Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2001 9:20 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Originally posted by C Elegans:
<STRONG>You can also do what I did - check out the possibilities to skip school and take the necessary exams for higher education as a "privatist". I don't know about Canada, but in Sweden, you can take oral and written exams too prove you have the required knowledge in a certain topic.</STRONG>
That's what I did. At the end of 10th grade, I dropped out of High School and took my GED(General Education Diploma) test, passed, got my GED, and went straight to college, thus skipping the 11th and 12th grades. It was a real culture shock, though, because I had homeschooled for 8th, 9th, and 10th grades.
Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2001 9:22 pm
by Sailor Saturn
Originally posted by Darkpoet:
<STRONG>What do you want, a long arm or a short one?

</STRONG>
Hey, is that the long arm of the law?
Posted: Mon Oct 08, 2001 9:22 pm
by Aegis
Originally posted by Darkpoet:
<STRONG>
A van pulls up, on the side says "Dp the Arms dealer"
What do you want, a long arm or a short one?

</STRONG>
Hmm.... What do you got that can cause mass amounts of damage, assisnate a Federal leader, and create a very big boom, but only costs ten bucks?
