What’s a piece of advice you got as a kid that still sticks with you?
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Dad was teaching my sister and I to cross the street and told us to look both ways.
We were crossing a one-way road at the time and I asked "Do we need to look both ways on a one-way road?"
He said "People are idiots, you look both ways."
Also very helpful when you travel to countries with left-hand traffic (or right-hand traffic depending on which way you are used to). The first couple days cars are constantly coming from the wrong side.
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Whenever someone gifts you something, just say "Thank you very much" and accept the gift. Don't do the "are you sure" or "oh no you shouldn't have" dance.
Lmao that's every Chinese New Year ever. The red packet exchange is just so awkward and weird (IMO) and completely pointless.
Like Family A's parents gives Family B's kid $100 then Family B's parents give Family A's two children each $50 (totalling $100). Then when they go home, the parents "ask" (read: demand) the kid to give them the money for "safekeeping". So... like... wtf is the point. This is why I don't like the idea of "tradition", conservatives be weird af. Like, at one point, I just stop caring when they give it to me and I'm like "just give it to mom" lol.
Red Packet exchange is just glorified Money PingPong games.
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Oh that was it. My mom used to say it a lot. Sort of a meta answer I suppose.
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Oh that was it. My mom used to say it a lot. Sort of a meta answer I suppose.
I was just pulling your leg. It's a good one.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
Don’t walk in the middle of the “aisle” (the part cars drive down) in parking lots. I don’t forget it because I constantly see people (morons) not following this advice and almost getting hit by cars.
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Don’t walk in the middle of the “aisle” (the part cars drive down) in parking lots. I don’t forget it because I constantly see people (morons) not following this advice and almost getting hit by cars.
Walk like you drive, is how I heard and say it. Unfortunately, people also drive like complete idiots.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
"assigning blame is the most useless reaction to disaster. Do damage control and then move on."
My parents used to blame each other a lot when they were fighting. When my friends mess up something, I will them that it's annoying, and then figure out how to deal with it. But I'll never make them feel bad for it, because it's just wasted energy.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
Not in a good way but: "crying never solved anything."
It might not be a full solution but it sure is a relief. Still can't cry to this day without feeling guilty about it. -
"Never pass up the opportunity to keep your mouth shut."
Better to keep your mouth shut and look stupid then open it and remove all doubt.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
Everything's better when it's free and they're right, that's why I'm a house burglar now!
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
you don't always have to be right, but you do always need to be correct.
meaning, you pick the things you argue to be right about but you should always do things correctly the first time.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
In fifth grade my teacher retired halfway through the year. He did nothing wrong, it was just his time to retire. So he taught half the year while training his replacement to take over. He is one of the best teachers I ever had.
On his last day he left us with this piece of advice.
"Credit Cards are a scam." Then he explained in detail how they can be used to trap you in debt and keep you struggling. He said always use cash when you can, otherwise don't buy what you can't afford.
That was the only financial advice I ever got in all of my 12 years of schooling.
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Better to keep your mouth shut and look stupid then open it and remove all doubt.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Yes but... If there's something you don't understand, it's better to ask about it ahead of time rather than later, after everyone assumed you understood the situation.
You can definitely come out looking like more of an idiot by waiting till the last second to clarify a misunderstanding.
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Not in a good way but: "crying never solved anything."
It might not be a full solution but it sure is a relief. Still can't cry to this day without feeling guilty about it.It's a relief valve. Sometimes when I find myself overwhelmed and feel like I want to collapse, I'll go watch a bunch of emotional videos to make myself bawl for an hour or two. It's extremely cathartic, and I usually feel a lot better afterwards.
My go-to videos are Thai commercials on YouTube. Short, super heart-wrenching, and unimportant enough that I don't feel bad afterwards like if I watched a sad movie like Schindler's List or Grave of the Fireflies.
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In fifth grade my teacher retired halfway through the year. He did nothing wrong, it was just his time to retire. So he taught half the year while training his replacement to take over. He is one of the best teachers I ever had.
On his last day he left us with this piece of advice.
"Credit Cards are a scam." Then he explained in detail how they can be used to trap you in debt and keep you struggling. He said always use cash when you can, otherwise don't buy what you can't afford.
That was the only financial advice I ever got in all of my 12 years of schooling.
The problem is that credit cards can be useful, but you need to have a certain mindset with money to have them. If money is an one-off switch instead of a number, you're going to be ruined by debt.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
One that's come up a lot for me went something like "people don't think about you much, they're all focused on their own life and problems, you're just in the background". I have a tendency to nervously overthink other people's reactions, which is why it was brought up, but it has lots of other applications too.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
My dad told me, “It is a sin not to live up to your potential.”
He’s not a religious person I think he just wanted to explain how heavy it may have weighed in his own mind, but we both support my mother’s idea of heaven and on occasion go to church with her at a nice church with a good community where they live. I don’t like religion but I do like open minded communities that support themselves as well as people they think differently than.
Anyways I’ve added more openminded sounding meanings to it over my life like, considering opportunities of each individual and “live up to” can mean just being a person of integrity.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
From my mum "whatever you do in life we will be here to support you"
From my dad "dont be a dickhead"
Its hard not to be a dickhead there are so many times I'm stuck between standing up for myself or letting things slide. I think ive learnt how to find the balance but i still miscalculate occasionally.
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Mine was from my mother: "Never cry for a man. He'll never cry for you."
Dad: "Only break one law at a time"
Dad: "A job can give you three things: Good pay, learn useful new skills, and a comfortable and enjoyable place to work. If you aren't getting at least two of those things, look for another job."
Mum didn't really give advice, but I probably would have done a lot more dumb shit if not for her guiding me not to.
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Not at all toxic and loaded
The capital city of Jordan won't shed a single tear for any of us!