Tuesday, January 24, 2006

i walk like you ...


Do DADs make a great parent?

Many of us, dedicate our lives to our mother.. I have seen many on stage thank their Mother, in the crowd or sometimes in the heaven, for their achievements.

A child(daughter/son) wants to talk, walk like his father. A Mother teaches us how to talk and walk ... She tries hard but the child always wants to immitate his /her father.


10 comments:

passerby55 said...

thankyou dreamyeyes

u r right

strong and sturdy wings soar great heights.

GrasshopperBoy said...

i dunno...i think boys are more attached to their moms and girls to their dads. so if it a woman goes on stage to accept an oscar or something, i'm sure she'll be thanking her dad.

passerby55 said...

thanks GHB... i agree to ur view about attachments...i am attached to my dad, but if in a situation ...i will thank MY MOTHER first...(All Mothers deserve it first)

Lil Mizfit said...

one tends to look up to what one preceives as 'stronger'. as a kid, its easy to look upto ur father coz he big and strong. as we grow older, we realise that strength has various forms. most of the forms of strength, lie in a mother.

Unknown said...

My mom is one of my best friends in the world. By the same token, I wish everyone had a father as giving as I do--even though we butt heads a lot of the time.

:)

passerby55 said...

@bhakti and mizfit:
welcome and thanks for your comments. Its my pleasure to read them.

Unknown said...

I told your parrot joke to my family while driving in the car yesterday. My mom and dad LOVED the joke. Thanks for the laugh!!

passerby55 said...

@bhakti

you are always welcome my friend

i am happy, (through a joke) that for some moments i was with you and your dear parents in the car.
and on an occasion like "the laugh", cannot ask for more.

laughter is the only medicine, as far as, i know.

Anonymous said...

hihi

Anonymous said...

Interesting conversation... passer_by.. We all are always thinking and fighting on who should get the credit to groom the child.. but have we ever thought of the individual thinking of that child?

What he/she really wants to do with his/her life? We try to impose our identity on that child by setting goals for him/her... that we think is right for the child.. ignoring completely his/her feelings.

How many of us really respect the independent thinking of that child honestly?

Now a days we are loosing that child's important faculties like his thinking power, rationalizing power, expressing power by telling him what is right or wrong....

From the bottom of my heart I appeal to ALL the parents to take time and listen to what he / she has to say...