Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My less than angelic teens have all of these life skills. I feel a little bit better today. They still make poor choices, but at least at some point they will have life skills to fall back on.
But could they read the title of this thread and answer appropriately or not at all? If so, ask them to teach you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know how to use a mimeograph machine, either.
You never did this in school? Apparently, you missed out on an important childhood experience. You crank the machine with a handle on the side, then you hold the paper copies up to your nose and smell them.
I mean, I DID, a couple of times, but they were obsolete by the time I was in middle school, so I've forgotten how.
I had never heard of this machine before this thread. This is not a life skill any more churning butter is a life skill (in this century.)
That. Was. The. Point.
Some of the things mentioned here are no longer really "life skills," or soon won't be.
LMAO folks really are struggling with reading comprehension.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know how to use a mimeograph machine, either.
You never did this in school? Apparently, you missed out on an important childhood experience. You crank the machine with a handle on the side, then you hold the paper copies up to your nose and smell them.
I mean, I DID, a couple of times, but they were obsolete by the time I was in middle school, so I've forgotten how.
I had never heard of this machine before this thread. This is not a life skill any more churning butter is a life skill (in this century.)
Anonymous wrote:My less than angelic teens have all of these life skills. I feel a little bit better today. They still make poor choices, but at least at some point they will have life skills to fall back on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know how to use a mimeograph machine, either.
You never did this in school? Apparently, you missed out on an important childhood experience. You crank the machine with a handle on the side, then you hold the paper copies up to your nose and smell them.
I mean, I DID, a couple of times, but they were obsolete by the time I was in middle school, so I've forgotten how.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one has mentioned reading a map. What do you do when your phone is lost or out of charge and you don’t know the way?
Ah. That would necessitate my learning to read a map, too. Not happening.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't jump over a chain link fence.
Yes, and mine can't hotwire a car. Thank god she can jump a turnstile. Why on earth would anyone NEED to jump a chain link fence if they're following rules?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know how to use a mimeograph machine, either.
You never did this in school? Apparently, you missed out on an important childhood experience. You crank the machine with a handle on the side, then you hold the paper copies up to your nose and smell them.
What's a mimeograph machine?
Anonymous wrote:A few months after I moved into my first apartment with a roommate, we couldn’t understand why the dryer was no longer working very well. We called the landlord to look at it. We didn’t know about the lint trap! We had both done our own laundry for years at home, but neither of us knew this. At home, it would just get cleaned by someone else soon enough that it was never noticed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interestingly, a lot of these things are no longer useful life skills, or soon won't be, or will only be in limited circumstances. I don't know how to use a mimeograph machine, either.
Dishes? Laundry, Taxes? Cooking? Yeah totally obsolete
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So much for my ADHD child. Namely organization and awareness. Organization is a must in life, and awareness is a must for important things like driving. Both worry me a lot.
Again normal.
I'm an adult without ADHD and am not organized. I bet I too could go to a doctor and get some amphetamines!