Turning into your parents
Unable to hold back the genetic tide, I find myself gardening in my carpet slippers, asking for a knife and fork in McDonalds and agreeing with the Daily Telegraph. I'm beyond help - what about you?
Thanks to b3th for the suggestion
( , Thu 30 Apr 2009, 13:39)
Unable to hold back the genetic tide, I find myself gardening in my carpet slippers, asking for a knife and fork in McDonalds and agreeing with the Daily Telegraph. I'm beyond help - what about you?
Thanks to b3th for the suggestion
( , Thu 30 Apr 2009, 13:39)
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telling off
I said to one of my kids the other day, "If you drop that and bust it, your mum will go light.".
I've not a clue where it comes from, but I know what it implies. But it's what my dad used to say to me under similar circumstances.
I also sometimes say "ee-li-wa", which is Korean for "come here", and is one of the phrases my dad brought back from his stint in Korea in the early 50s.
( , Wed 6 May 2009, 14:22, 1 reply)
I said to one of my kids the other day, "If you drop that and bust it, your mum will go light.".
I've not a clue where it comes from, but I know what it implies. But it's what my dad used to say to me under similar circumstances.
I also sometimes say "ee-li-wa", which is Korean for "come here", and is one of the phrases my dad brought back from his stint in Korea in the early 50s.
( , Wed 6 May 2009, 14:22, 1 reply)
Strange...
how you pick up phrases from your folks...
At least you didn't learn: "Me licky, licky, ten-dollah, luv yu long tyme."
*click*
( , Wed 6 May 2009, 16:54, closed)
how you pick up phrases from your folks...
At least you didn't learn: "Me licky, licky, ten-dollah, luv yu long tyme."
*click*
( , Wed 6 May 2009, 16:54, closed)
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