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difficult child has now sold (ebay) all the gifts he received from us last year...
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<blockquote data-quote="Signorina" data-source="post: 488220"><p>Nancy - about the Xbox -I think it's great that you hid it.</p><p></p><p>Your post kind of illustrates why I am secretly a little happy that difficult child sold his. It seems that the "stoners" play A LOT of X-Box - even against each other online while they smoke. (which I had not realized until my baptism by fire Fall 2011) I am secretly a tad hopeful that his decision to get rid of his X-Box is a move in the right direction. </p><p></p><p>difficult child has always been that kind of kid - takes after my H. When H needs to shake things up at work - get more motivated - the FIRST thing he does is rearrange his office. It's like a restart, I guess (H is a sales rep) Similarly, when difficult child wants to turn over a new leaf (scholastically in the past), he clears his room completely of clutter, gets rid of any distractions and leaves some visual clues of what he is trying to accomplish (a HS varsity football poster when he was in jr high, a Chart of Elements when he was starting college). Ya - I know it's probably about needing the money, but I won't weep that it's gone - Know what I mean??</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Signorina, post: 488220"] Nancy - about the Xbox -I think it's great that you hid it. Your post kind of illustrates why I am secretly a little happy that difficult child sold his. It seems that the "stoners" play A LOT of X-Box - even against each other online while they smoke. (which I had not realized until my baptism by fire Fall 2011) I am secretly a tad hopeful that his decision to get rid of his X-Box is a move in the right direction. difficult child has always been that kind of kid - takes after my H. When H needs to shake things up at work - get more motivated - the FIRST thing he does is rearrange his office. It's like a restart, I guess (H is a sales rep) Similarly, when difficult child wants to turn over a new leaf (scholastically in the past), he clears his room completely of clutter, gets rid of any distractions and leaves some visual clues of what he is trying to accomplish (a HS varsity football poster when he was in jr high, a Chart of Elements when he was starting college). Ya - I know it's probably about needing the money, but I won't weep that it's gone - Know what I mean?? [/QUOTE]
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difficult child has now sold (ebay) all the gifts he received from us last year...
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