Before my daughter could read or even knew her alphabet, she used to sit down and scrawl and scribble "word" after "word"; page after page she "wrote".
Then she'd give it to me and say "Read it, Daddy."
I would fumble and say, "Well, it says, "Once upon a time..."
"Pogo said... Before my daughter could read or even knew her alphabet, she used to sit down and scrawl and scribble "word" after "word"; page after page she "wrote""
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8 comments:
Funnier aurally.
'Scuse me, while I kiss this guy.
See that girl, watch her scream, kicking the dancing queen.
The algebra has a devil for a sidekick eeeeeeeeee.
Before my daughter could read or even knew her alphabet, she used to sit down and scrawl and scribble "word" after "word"; page after page she "wrote".
Then she'd give it to me and say "Read it, Daddy."
I would fumble and say, "Well, it says, "Once upon a time..."
She: "That's not what it says!!"
Me: "Well then, you tell me what it says."
She: "Daddy, you silly, I can't read!"
It might work best to pair dyslexics with dysgraphics, unless the letter is sent to an aphasic.
Actually, that sounds a lot like the health care bill. Ba-dum-bum.
I'll stop now.
I don't care how it's written - what are they saying?
"Pogo said...
Before my daughter could read or even knew her alphabet, she used to sit down and scrawl and scribble "word" after "word"; page after page she "wrote""
Are you Pogo_Herman?
Somebody ought to turn that last one into a working font.
It doesn't help they've given up teaching penmanship in the schools.
Maybe I should apply for a job; I have considerable experience interpreting my own handwriting.
Unless more than a day has passed...then it's impossible.
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