skyhightree1
Well-known member
TexasBred":1nbvgieu said:I do still wish I could weld. :nod:
Come join me in welding school
TexasBred":1nbvgieu said:I do still wish I could weld. :nod:
Every day. Doctored 5 calves today wondering what if they didn't make it how that would affect my margins. At the same time made me thankful to have them, knowing there was a time I couldn't afford 5 calves. It's all about perspective.callmefence":1inrlqhj said:True Grit Farms":1inrlqhj said:Margonme":1inrlqhj said:Right on. The way I live. I perform my passions to perfection.
Anxiety: caring too much about your vocation.
Depression: not caring about anything.
I fall in the Anxiety category.
Money is a tool. Having said that. I like to have enough tools to keep the job going. Lol
Money, the more you have the more you want. I'd rather live a simple life and do the job with what I have. I lost all my paper retirement in 2008 and it made me a better person. I guess I'm depressed now, because I don't care about anything. This has been a good run in the market, but if our new POTUS bombs out it could get ugly really quick. You have nothing till you have it in your hand.
Has anyone else noticed that the more you have. The more you worry about losing it
zirlottkim":183cqrvt said:What is success? I had a Great Grandfather that lived to be 94. He was an independent commercial fisherman his entire life and thoroughly enjoyed it . He never worked for anyone except his self. His kids made him stop fishing when he was in his mid 80s so he dug in his garden the rest of his life. He never accumulated much wealth but never was indebted to anyone and made his own way his entire life. From what I hear, he had many debts owed to him over the years. He was married to the same woman, my Great Grandmother, and they died a few months apart. They raised a large family and all were good decent people. Most of his sons became fisherman and found the same enjoyment and satisfaction in the work. He died the year I was born so I never knew him. To me, he had very a successful life because he was self reliant and self sufficient. I think many people push their kids into careers for financial or prestigious reasons only. I pity people with Monday to Friday jobs that hate what they are doing and live looking forward to the weekend. I understand that sometimes people have to do jobs they don't like, but find some enjoyment in it. The "satisfaction" of doing a good job and making your own way seems to be lost in todays society. That is what I want to teach my kids no matter where their interests and life takes them.
I would call him a spectacular success.zirlottkim":14n56i7z said:What is success? I had a Great Grandfather that lived to be 94. He was an independent commercial fisherman his entire life and thoroughly enjoyed it . He never worked for anyone except his self. His kids made him stop fishing when he was in his mid 80s so he dug in his garden the rest of his life. He never accumulated much wealth but never was indebted to anyone and made his own way his entire life. From what I hear, he had many debts owed to him over the years. He was married to the same woman, my Great Grandmother, and they died a few months apart. They raised a large family and all were good decent people. Most of his sons became fisherman and found the same enjoyment and satisfaction in the work. He died the year I was born so I never knew him. To me, he had very a successful life because he was self reliant and self sufficient. I think many people push their kids into careers for financial or prestigious reasons only. I pity people with Monday to Friday jobs that hate what they are doing and live looking forward to the weekend. I understand that sometimes people have to do jobs they don't like, but find some enjoyment in it. The "satisfaction" of doing a good job and making your own way seems to be lost in todays society. That is what I want to teach my kids no matter where their interests and life takes them.
Sky the two of us would probably burn the world down and still not get anything stuck together. :lol: :lol: :lol:skyhightree1":3oqp6848 said:TexasBred":3oqp6848 said:I do still wish I could weld. :nod:
Come join me in welding school
Margonme":2iz57sa5 said:Addressed to Jogeephus:
Specifics:
1. Guidance: provided guidance to foster confidence and healthy self-esteem.
2. Participated in school events that promoted education. Such as week-end laboratory studies sponsored by Clint's advanced biology high school teacher who took a special interest in Clint.
3. Constructed a well equipped laboratory in the basement that included a professional oil emersion microscope.
4. Intelligence- at an early age we got feedback from Clint's teachers that he read at 3 to 4 grades above his level. He read the book The Hot Zone about the ebola virus when he was in the fourth grade.
5. I spent time with Clint. We were buddies. I treated him as an equal. He enjoyed information about the world around him.
7. Discipline - I insisted that learning be a priority. He was permitted to play with electronic devices.
8. Responsibility- he was required that personal obligation have to be fullfilled. Going to bed, getting up, being on time, treating others with respect, etc.
9. Honesty - the rule was, a lie gets you punishment; a full confession forgives the trespass.
10. We set a lifestyle example as you say.
11. Yes, Jo. I never pushed him in any direction. Which affected my hobbies and passions. I was an avid hunter. It did not fit his style. I shot a porcupine that was eating my trees. When I came back in the house, he was crying. He said he watched that porcupine every night and he did not want it killed. I never shot another one. I gradually hunted less and less. Preferring to spend time with Clint. When he started asking questions about religion, I was honest in confessing that I believe the Universe is a natural phenomenon. I told him he should read the Bible or any other religious doctrine and decide for himself. At this moment, I cannot describe exactly what his spiritual beliefs are. If he told me he is a Hindu, it would not be my business or concern.
12. In high school, a family friend who was a medical doctor mentored Clint. He shadowed the Doctor. It had a dramatic impact on Clint. Clint was unsettled by some of the problems small children go through.
Jo, I agree that my first response does sound racist. That was not my intention. My intent was to demonstrate that much of what we are is defined by our ancestors.
Jogeephus":190uybbk said:I knew you weren't trying to make some racist claim that would make Hitler proud just messed with you to get you to be more specific and add clarity. And thanks for taking the time to do so because your list highlights some common denominators I expected to see.
While I don't agree with you on it being genetic, less of course your family tree has no branching, because I think most children are born equal and its the influences and upbringing that sets them apart later in life. Environmental influences if you will and what makes it difficult is realizing each child is different and requires a different hand on the lead rope and this takes dedication and devotion on the part of the parents.
Your thoughtful description has many common denominators I expected to see. The instillation of self confidence which allowed him freedom to take some chances and not fear criticism, your involvement in his schooling, your self confidence to allow him outside the box to learn from others, self sacrifice on the parents part and of course your encouragement both verbally and materialistically and very importantly a love of reading books. In short, you allowed him to be HIM and you didn't relive your life through him but changed your life to center around him. From what I've witnessed, this seems to always be a recipe for a child's success in whatever field they choose and I think if all parents would follow this path then we would all be better off because its the people, not the government, that makes america great. And, BTW, I still think america is great and is full of opportunities if one desires to pursue them.
Just out of curiosity, how many books would you say he read a month?
Jogeephus":11vf59ye said:That's incredible. Reminds me of a guy I went to school with. He's gone on to do great things.
Children are incredible. I don't think the importance of encouraging children to read can ever be understated.
TexasBred":zjgkzx3z said:Sky the two of us would probably burn the world down and still not get anything stuck together. :lol: :lol: :lol:skyhightree1":zjgkzx3z said:TexasBred":zjgkzx3z said:I do still wish I could weld. :nod:
Come join me in welding school
Jogeephus":kwixa8go said:Margonme":kwixa8go said:Addressed to Jogeephus:
Specifics:
1. Guidance: provided guidance to foster confidence and healthy self-esteem.
2. Participated in school events that promoted education. Such as week-end laboratory studies sponsored by Clint's advanced biology high school teacher who took a special interest in Clint.
3. Constructed a well equipped laboratory in the basement that included a professional oil emersion microscope.
4. Intelligence- at an early age we got feedback from Clint's teachers that he read at 3 to 4 grades above his level. He read the book The Hot Zone about the ebola virus when he was in the fourth grade.
5. I spent time with Clint. We were buddies. I treated him as an equal. He enjoyed information about the world around him.
7. Discipline - I insisted that learning be a priority. He was permitted to play with electronic devices.
8. Responsibility- he was required that personal obligation have to be fullfilled. Going to bed, getting up, being on time, treating others with respect, etc.
9. Honesty - the rule was, a lie gets you punishment; a full confession forgives the trespass.
10. We set a lifestyle example as you say.
11. Yes, Jo. I never pushed him in any direction. Which affected my hobbies and passions. I was an avid hunter. It did not fit his style. I shot a porcupine that was eating my trees. When I came back in the house, he was crying. He said he watched that porcupine every night and he did not want it killed. I never shot another one. I gradually hunted less and less. Preferring to spend time with Clint. When he started asking questions about religion, I was honest in confessing that I believe the Universe is a natural phenomenon. I told him he should read the Bible or any other religious doctrine and decide for himself. At this moment, I cannot describe exactly what his spiritual beliefs are. If he told me he is a Hindu, it would not be my business or concern.
12. In high school, a family friend who was a medical doctor mentored Clint. He shadowed the Doctor. It had a dramatic impact on Clint. Clint was unsettled by some of the problems small children go through.
Jo, I agree that my first response does sound racist. That was not my intention. My intent was to demonstrate that much of what we are is defined by our ancestors.
I knew you weren't trying to make some racist claim that would make Hitler proud just messed with you to get you to be more specific and add clarity. And thanks for taking the time to do so because your list highlights some common denominators I expected to see.
While I don't agree with you on it being genetic, less of course your family tree has no branching, because I think most children are born equal and its the influences and upbringing that sets them apart later in life. Environmental influences if you will and what makes it difficult is realizing each child is different and requires a different hand on the lead rope and this takes dedication and devotion on the part of the parents.
Your thoughtful description has many common denominators I expected to see. The instillation of self confidence which allowed him freedom to take some chances and not fear criticism, your involvement in his schooling, your self confidence to allow him outside the box to learn from others, self sacrifice on the parents part and of course your encouragement both verbally and materialistically and very importantly a love of reading books. In short, you allowed him to be HIM and you didn't relive your life through him but changed your life to center around him. From what I've witnessed, this seems to always be a recipe for a child's success in whatever field they choose and I think if all parents would follow this path then we would all be better off because its the people, not the government, that makes america great. And, BTW, I still think america is great and is full of opportunities if one desires to pursue them.
Just out of curiosity, how many books would you say he read a month?
hurleyjd":3qh2833j said:Jogeephus":3qh2833j said:That's incredible. Reminds me of a guy I went to school with. He's gone on to do great things.
Children are incredible. I don't think the importance of encouraging children to read can ever be understated.
And how is the bug doing been out of the nest for while.
Caustic Burno":3qh2833j said:Jo some of the IQ is genetic if you are born with a 100 you can study you butt off and raise your number, you might get to 110 or 115 you will never get to 140. The average American IQ today is 90 a hundred years ago it was 110.
The higher population grows the more it drops lot of studies on this.
Caustic Burno":2vjzt7zl said:https://www.google.com/amp/s/neociceroniantimes.wordpress.com/2016/08/21/why-the-decline-of-americas-average-iq-is-a-cause-for-concern/amp/?client=safari