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Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 7:02 pm
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Sanguina Cruenta Vice Captain
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Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 8:30 pm
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Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2009 10:00 pm
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Posted: Thu Mar 05, 2009 6:12 am
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Posted: Thu Mar 05, 2009 9:40 am
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Posted: Thu Mar 05, 2009 11:29 am
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Posted: Thu Dec 31, 2009 10:37 am
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Posted: Thu Dec 31, 2009 12:13 pm
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xXOnYx MoOnXx they mean the same thing really but people think that the pentagram is worse then the pentacle i have two necklaces with pentacles on them and at first my mom didnt want me to wear it but she got used to it and gave up on taking it away. if she takes it then snatch it back put it back on and ignore what she says coz she may be ur mother but u are not her little robot u are independent and u have a right to express what ever u want to. u should say that to her shes gonna get mad but thats to bad for her right!?
Wow. Your advice, to be frank, is the action of a spoiled and rude child. It is ungracious, self-centered, and disrespectful in the extreme.
In the US, parents have the right, until a child reaches the age of majority, to decide their education and upbringing - and that includes religiously. That is the law. If your parents don't like what you're doing, you have two options: stop until you are a legal adult, or move out on your own autonomy, and remove their authority over you.
Even if it weren't law, you exist under your parents hospitality until you no longer reside under their roof - it is incredibly disrespectful and rude to ignore them, and basically throw that hospitality into their faces. Parents should not have to feel uncomfortable in their own homes, that they work hard to pay for and maintain. Unless you pay rent, pay for your own food and clothes and entertainment - you are a guest in their home. All the things you believe you own, are actually theirs, if they paid for them. They allow you to use them, nothing more.
You want to be an independant person? Do it. Move out, get a job, pay your own way through life. Take responsiblity for all of your actions, knowing no-one else is going to bail you out if it all goes belly-up. Don't take your parents hospitality for granted - one day that safety net will well and truly be gone, and your sense of entitlement will not shield you from failure, or disaster.
I remember well what it was like to be a teenager chafing under the rules of a parent, when I wanted to establish my own identity and autonomy. But it doesn't last forever - there's plenty of time afterwards to get into the world and be who you want to be. Learning to be patient is a valuable and nescessary skill - think of waiting for your own autonomy as a chance to practice that. -----------------------------------------------------------------
An admin note: Onyx, if you are going to continue to post here, you need to do more than post once or twice, sporadically, and then vanish again. Your posts have left many of us with questions for you, which you completely ignore, and we're fairly sick of it. If someone responds to one of your posts with questions, reply to them. Failure to reply could result in your removal from the Guild.
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