I want to encourage you to keep growing the strength of teachers so that more
kids believe in themselves.»
I love how
kids believe in him and the hope he brings to all the children who might have spent Christmas without a toy.
Do
your kids believe in santa?
They help
kids believe in themselves and find their strengths.
I wonder do
your kids believe in that other mythical creature from the sky t hat comes down every year at christmas?
May I also add that when I was
a kid I believed in Santa and he gave me presents.
Whole
Kids believes in «unjunking» their lives and that wasteful materialism and consumerism needs to evolve to a more enlightened conscious consumption.
Some moms feel like encouraging
kids believing in Santa is part of the magic and wonder of childhood while others (and others) don't want to lie to their kids.
Not exact matches
You'd also expect people who
believed the Or model would resist teaching their
kids this model for the same reason — they'd fear their
kids would think they could have both and,
in trying for both, unwittingly sacrifice some of the one they valued.
Still, you probably remember a time
in your childhood when you
believed the smart
kids in school were less fit and the jocks were less smart, or something like that.
Those values extend from «We
believe in providing positive influences for children» to «We emphasize teamwork and make decisions as a team» to «We get involved
in our community, particularly
in partnerships with
kids.»
Some parents raising children
in the smartphone and tablet era limit their
kids» «screen time,» because they
believe emerging research that shows that speech and language development hinges on everyday human interactions.
As a result, too many British Columbians are living paycheque to paycheque — worried about their jobs, worried about whether they can afford to retire and
believing their
kids are
in B.C's first generation to be left worse off economically than their parents.
I taught
kids confidence — to
believe in themselves, to stand up for what's right and for others.»
The retailer is debuting a two - minute digital video featuring
kids talking about how and why they
believe in the man
in the red suit.
Family, freinds, lovers, neighbors, co-workers, the postman, people from your church, people you like, people you don't like, your ex-husband or ex-wife (I know you don't want to, but take one for the team), the cashier at Walmart, your child's teacher, the
kid in the drive - thru window at McDonald's, the random encyclopedia salesman that knocks on your door while your eating dinner, the pushy car salesman who doesn't
believe your «just looking,» the overweight plumber wedged under your kitchen sink
You tell your
kid not to
believe in their imaginary friend... yet grown up, educated adults still can't process their rational thought and hang on to their teddy bear GOD for comfort... like Linus who can't give up his blanket.
David Garcia, a former gang member who now Ministers at the House of Worship Christian Center,
believes that troubled
kids will be the ones most hurt by the ban: «
In schools there's a lot of violence going on.
I think what this
kid did was admirable, and that was to stand up for principles he
believed in.
Just like you
believed in Santa when you were a
kid, now god is your adult Santa Claus because you never matured EMOTIONALLY and you still need a hand to hold like you held your mommy's hand as a child.
I'm not a theist (i laughed at the
kid on the playground at 12 that still
believed in Santa Clause!)
And MANY little
kids still
believe in them.
«Non-believers» can sometimes be angry when fervent believers
believe so very fervently that they insist everybody ELSE
believe as fervently as THEY do, and then they want our government to enforce that fervent belief by making our
kids pray
in schools to your concept of a god.
I don't want a dime of my money going to teaching
kids to
believe in santa.
So
in the (not so distant) future look for him to do animal sacrifices
in his yard, beat / kill his
kids when they mouth off, torch his neighborhood when he realizes he lives next to people that don't
believe as he does, own and beat his slaves, and we won't even discuss how he'll treat his wives.
We stop
believing in Santa when we're about 7 and we realize it's physically impossible for a fat ass to fit down a chimney and deliver presents to 3 billion
kids in one night.
If you want to
believe in God on faith, thatâ $ ™ s up to you, but to try and pretend that the evidence is 50/50 is just
kidding yourself.»
If you want to
believe in God on faith, that's up to you, but to try and pretend that the evidence is 50/50 is just
kidding yourself.
my point is simply this, people who
believe in an after life are as sad as those who
believe in santa... if your good you get an after life... your
kidding right, grow up!
I read Harry Potter, does that mean I
believe there's a magical school
in Britain where little wizard
kids go to learn magic?
Kid, there have been many different points
in my life where I was a believer like you (not as crazy but still,
believed), so it isn't like I read it only once as an atheist.
And if you
kids want to
believe in accidental magic you go right ahead.
Magical Accident Don't know about you
kids but I quit
believing in magic back when I found out ice cream cones were hollow.
I
believe anything is possible, did some
kids in the late 1800's early 1900's (I forget the time, but there is a movie about it) claim to of taken pictures of fairies?
I think I'm too simple
in my thinking that; if you don't like it, DO N'T WATCH... if you don't agree with it, DO N'T CHOOSE TO LIVE YOUR LIFE THAT WAY... Seems like a very simplistic way of thinking, but I have personal opinions on EVERYTHING, but I don't force others to live their lives according to my moral fiber... i don't judge people for living their lives the way that makes them happy... And i
believe that IGNORANCE is the basis for INTOLERANCE... people are famous for HATING things that they don't understand... again, if it MORALLY offends you, don't read stories on things that you don't agree with, don't watch shows that portray choices that you don't agree with... The Brown family seems close knit, almost like extended family living under one roof... the
kids work together and get along much better than a lot of «mainstream» households i see...
There's a beautiful world of hurting crazy out there and our brave
kids are
in the centre of it, and our people are the bloodied wounded because of it, and our dreams and our hopes and our futures and our communities and our countries are hanging
in the balance through it, and there is a war
in the heavenlies and the man laying beside me is
believing that if our lives aren't up
in the air where the battle is, our lives on the ground fail.
I used to be catholic I
believed in God as a
kid but when I grew older I turned my back on God have not even been to church
in 5 to 6 years now could this be a sign or is it a allusion I am making into a big deal which really ai nt that big of a deal maybe I gone insane I don't know I don't want to sound like I'm bragging to seek attention for this which I am not I am simply just looking for some insight on why this has occurred to me.
At least little
kids have a reason (evidence) to
believe in Santa.
For us, life is bad, we should have not gone to Church and learn, we should have
believed in Christ without much knowledge, like
kids.
I don't
believe in the bible at all or any religion for that manner, but I think this
kid was coming from a good place when he made that decision and it is his right.
... Wow, you sound like quite the human being if you seriously
believe this
kid was at all
in the right.
You apply for a job
in my community by running a campaign for a paid office that my local tax dollars pay for and you get elected then show up to your first scheduled meeting and decide to spend the first 5 minutes — eating donuts instead of working, speaking to the audience about your personal problems with your wife, telling the audience about an upcoming play your
kid will be
in, telling the captive audience about the benefits of being gay, speaking to them about God or praying aloud to your God regardless of which God the rest of the audience
believes in.
What if athiest parents are how you describe them, «
believe in... that there is no god controlling» and actively raise their
kids after this thought.
poor
kid has been brain washed all his life - been told he'll burn
in hell for all eternity if he doesn't
believe in jesus, sing songs of praise and kiss his feet - hopefully he'll someday realize that the flying spaghetti monster is the only true god and the rest is just ancient bs
You have more time on sunday to play with your
kids and go to the park or go to a market or work at the food pantry — all kinds of things you can do instead of keeping your mind weak and talking to make -
believe people
in your head and listening to really boring music.
Think about your
kids and what they
believe in.
in reality i do nt
believe in violence but this
kid was just looking for «you tube» fame.
From Picasso to Sir Ken Robinson, including my own and my possibly your observations with our own children going through school, it is
believed that our educational methods have ways of killing creativity
in kids.
We
believe God led us back last year (12 years later, this time with our 2
kids in tow), though now without any straight church affiliations, just spiritual support of mentors and friends.