
Hi.
You can be an 'Uncle' to your friends kids.I don't have any siblings, so I am incapable of being an uncle. Looks like fun though.
That's so true. I'm the godfather to my friend's two daughters as well as "Uncle Eddie" to the children of several other friends. I've known all these kids their entire lives and been dear friends with all their parents, so I'm just as much family as their actual blood relatives.
Cute hoodie. Love your facial expression, too.![]()
My wife got a haircut yesterday and asked me to take pictures (she's a teacher), and it was a nice opportunity to play with one of my new lenses:
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If I may say so, Timby, your wife is quite lovely (also, very nice haircut)!![]()
So very sorry to hear that. Other kids can be so incredibly mean and inconsiderate of other children and their medical issues. I've seen it happen so often in my life. I've seen visually and speech-impaired kids treated like garbage and it's always incensed me...your son should never feel bad about himself. I know he and others like him will probably carry the emotional scars of bullying and peer abuse for the rest of their lives, but always remind him that he's not what other people have told him he is. He's what he wants to be.
Sorry to get on my psychological soapbox like that, but I was teased an awful lot as a kid because I had a slight overbite, didn't come from a very well-to-do family and was shy and reclusive. Those sorts of things stay with you for a long, long time and I'm so thankful that my parents, other family and close friends were there to remind me what a good and valuable person I was. Always be a rod of support for your boy, Miss Chicken. No kid deserves to grow up with the scars of verbal abuse, no matter what the source. Even as a grown adult he needs to be reminded that he's a great person who's better than his problems.
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