Guilt over forcing kids to eat something they don't like seems pretty indolent when you consider the plight of parents in other parts of the world.
Not exact matches
In Texas, it was not a sense of
guilt over paying money to watch majestic orca whales prevented from swimming freely at sea because they're
forced to perform tricks in comparatively small enclosures at the behest of misguided trainers who could very well be maimed when SeaWorld's whales are eventually driven insane by the hopelessness of their situation that kept audiences away earlier this year.
And when you have played its destructive
force to the hilt, then suffer its awful consequences coming back at you, the desperate holding on at any cost to what you thought you had secured but which has turned to ashes, leaving in its wake not joy and freedom but the burden of
guilt over those you hurt and ruined... But why not truth at the outset, and the love which hears, believes, hopes and endures all things?
In angry clashes at PMQs, Jeremy Corbyn asked whether Mrs May felt the «slightest pang of
guilt» that Amber Rudd had been
forced to quit
over failings on her watch.
When Rosie feels
guilt for
forcing Roo to move, Carmelo tells her, «Parents choose one kid
over another all the time.»