Kindergarteners say some interesting things. The amount of times I had to “yup, okay, anyways this neat (redirection)” were daily. But you work with them long enough and you know their family secrets without asking for sure.
Beth
The mud pits are a test of strength!
I am going to get to a point where I just to back to botw for the gameplay lol.
My posting hours are evenings, and visits to the bathroom. Occasionally a slow weekend.
I see you’ve got the standard warthogs handling experience.
The ones most sensitive to price increases are the ones who consistently vote to for these types of leaders. They are visceral, reactive, and planning for the future is just paycheck-to-paycheck. They are reactionary. I worry most about what they do when they can no longer afford necessities, and how many ways that will be blamed on their levelheaded neighbors.
Still dipping below freezing. I can’t wait to see anything spring like. Bring on the insects and their mighty hordes.
I guess the dungeoneering itself. It’s probably the main thing I wish was different if I could change anything. Getting keys, compasses, each room being a puzzle, relying on the map, and the final boss really being earned is probably more work though…I love the shrines of course.
The one explaining a permanent tolerable level of unhappiness.
If this is how my children felt, I would consider myself a failure. It’s not acceptable in a healthy relationship that the other party feel fear. For children, parents have even more of an obligation of trust and security. Anything less is neglectful and perhaps even abusive.