The nicest thing someone's ever done for me
In amongst all the tales of bitterness and poo, we occasionally get fluffy stories that bring a small tear to our internet-jaded eyes.
In celebration of this, what is the nicest thing someone's done for you? Whether you thoroughly deserved it or it came out of the blue, tell us of heartwarming, selfless acts by others.
Failing that, what nice things have you done for other people, whether they liked it or not?
( , Thu 2 Oct 2008, 16:14)
In amongst all the tales of bitterness and poo, we occasionally get fluffy stories that bring a small tear to our internet-jaded eyes.
In celebration of this, what is the nicest thing someone's done for you? Whether you thoroughly deserved it or it came out of the blue, tell us of heartwarming, selfless acts by others.
Failing that, what nice things have you done for other people, whether they liked it or not?
( , Thu 2 Oct 2008, 16:14)
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eh, you've seen my posts about children
about how we should probably send them all on parentless holidays to Portugal and the like. Well, maybe I've occasionally been a little harsh.
My boyfriend has a nine-year-old daughter. One (of the very few) hot days over the summer she showed me how to burn things into wood using a magnifying glass. Now, in my 32 years on this earth I'd never done this before, so I really enjoyed being an old dog getting shown new tricks by a child.
Having shown me the basic procedure (angle magnifying glass; burn) she proceeded to scorch my name into a small piece of wood. She then burnt a heart shape on the other side, carefully put a hole through one end, and got her dad to glue a straw flower on it (she's not allowed to use superglue, and quite frankly her father should be banned from it as well).
She then presented me with my very own, personalised keyring. I was so proud and impressed that I got all choked up and couldn't speak for about 5 minutes, and that's damn unusual. Then, in typical doting fashion, I spent the next week making all my friends examine my very cool new keyring.
Ten years ago, if anyone told me I'd be with somebody who had a child, I'd have laughed. To a younger me it was always a dealbreaker. I could never understand why a person would want to be even peripherally involved with someone else's kid. Now, I can't think of anything nicer. My bloke is one of the best fathers I've seen. I'm delighted that he's in my life, and just as delighted that his daughter is in it too.
[Normal cynicism will be resumed shortly.]
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 12:08, 23 replies)
about how we should probably send them all on parentless holidays to Portugal and the like. Well, maybe I've occasionally been a little harsh.
My boyfriend has a nine-year-old daughter. One (of the very few) hot days over the summer she showed me how to burn things into wood using a magnifying glass. Now, in my 32 years on this earth I'd never done this before, so I really enjoyed being an old dog getting shown new tricks by a child.
Having shown me the basic procedure (angle magnifying glass; burn) she proceeded to scorch my name into a small piece of wood. She then burnt a heart shape on the other side, carefully put a hole through one end, and got her dad to glue a straw flower on it (she's not allowed to use superglue, and quite frankly her father should be banned from it as well).
She then presented me with my very own, personalised keyring. I was so proud and impressed that I got all choked up and couldn't speak for about 5 minutes, and that's damn unusual. Then, in typical doting fashion, I spent the next week making all my friends examine my very cool new keyring.
Ten years ago, if anyone told me I'd be with somebody who had a child, I'd have laughed. To a younger me it was always a dealbreaker. I could never understand why a person would want to be even peripherally involved with someone else's kid. Now, I can't think of anything nicer. My bloke is one of the best fathers I've seen. I'm delighted that he's in my life, and just as delighted that his daughter is in it too.
[Normal cynicism will be resumed shortly.]
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 12:08, 23 replies)
Awwww!
If she had been a boy he would have shown you how to fry ants with a magnifying glass.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 12:16, closed)
If she had been a boy he would have shown you how to fry ants with a magnifying glass.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 12:16, closed)
awwww bless you
I heard the crack as your icy exterior defrosted.
but just a little bit :)
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 12:36, closed)
I heard the crack as your icy exterior defrosted.
but just a little bit :)
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 12:36, closed)
I knew you had it in you.
You now have a healthy mix of cynicism and love.
Karma is restored.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 13:16, closed)
You now have a healthy mix of cynicism and love.
Karma is restored.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 13:16, closed)
Noooooo
This is alternative-reality CHCB. She's fallen through a wormhole in the space time continuum and swapped places with the CHCB we all know and love. Somewhere in another dimension, the real CHCB is dogging on a building site and breaking children's toys....
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 13:47, closed)
This is alternative-reality CHCB. She's fallen through a wormhole in the space time continuum and swapped places with the CHCB we all know and love. Somewhere in another dimension, the real CHCB is dogging on a building site and breaking children's toys....
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 13:47, closed)
I was going
for a minge joke there actually, but toes would work as well.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 15:23, closed)
for a minge joke there actually, but toes would work as well.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 15:23, closed)
I know you said you'd been under the weather
but I didn't realise it was this bad!
;-)
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 14:27, closed)
but I didn't realise it was this bad!
;-)
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 14:27, closed)
Ah, kids
Yep, kids used to be a deal breaker for me too.
However, I recently started seeing someone who has two. Boys in fact. And you know what? They're great. Sure, they can be a challenge sometimes, but for the most part they display the same personality traits I admire so much in their mother.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 14:50, closed)
Yep, kids used to be a deal breaker for me too.
However, I recently started seeing someone who has two. Boys in fact. And you know what? They're great. Sure, they can be a challenge sometimes, but for the most part they display the same personality traits I admire so much in their mother.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 14:50, closed)
Yep
you have to admire those "personality traits". I'm not sure you should be looking at them in young boys though.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 15:05, closed)
you have to admire those "personality traits". I'm not sure you should be looking at them in young boys though.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 15:05, closed)
and I like to think
that me vigourously participating in her 5 minute dance routine - singing and jazz hands included - in front of a beer garden full of people was my way of giving something back.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 14:57, closed)
that me vigourously participating in her 5 minute dance routine - singing and jazz hands included - in front of a beer garden full of people was my way of giving something back.
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 14:57, closed)
Aaaaaw
caught me by surprise. Kids do grow on you, a bit like fungus, really ....
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 15:53, closed)
caught me by surprise. Kids do grow on you, a bit like fungus, really ....
( , Fri 3 Oct 2008, 15:53, closed)
kids can rock
i used to be the same thinking kids are a big no no , mainly because of issues with ex's. But ever since iv had little miss welgar my perspective has changed a lot.
Besides it finally gives you a reason to go into toy shops again without feeling like a paedophile
( , Sat 4 Oct 2008, 9:34, closed)
i used to be the same thinking kids are a big no no , mainly because of issues with ex's. But ever since iv had little miss welgar my perspective has changed a lot.
Besides it finally gives you a reason to go into toy shops again without feeling like a paedophile
( , Sat 4 Oct 2008, 9:34, closed)
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