Y a veces solo piensas en como no estar… En desaparecer
“Quizas no se note, pero en verdad me estoy esforzando mucho para no rendirme…”
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Y a veces solo piensas en como no estar… En desaparecer
Días cono hoy es cuando me juego a mi misma un mala pasada. Cuando estoy mas debil a mis ataques, cuando sin piedad me desquito acorralandome con lo que mas me duele.
Quiero descansar de tantos pensamientos. Hablar sin parecer que soy solo ansiedad.
Tranquila todo estará bien
based on a true story
I don’t think Fortnite is to blame for kids nowadays not reading…
That’s the joke. It’s the authoritarian overbearing parent.
He was being sarcastic lol
That violin one hit close to home.
I remember doing homework once, asked my grandmother if she was proud of me. “Do some thing for me to be proud of.” That hurt.
That comic up there – I witnessed almost that exact scenario. Teacher wanted the kids to all pick books. One kid spots something on the shelf and gets visibly excited. Pulls it out and starts reading. Teacher sees it, snatches it off him and tells him that this is a book for 8 year olds (the kid was 15ish) and tells him to get a book more appropriate for his age. Kid slouches around the shelves for about 10 minutes, finally picks up a book at random and sits in his chair tucking the edges of each page into the binding to make that looped-page look. He didn’t read a word. He sat there and did this to his book for the remainder of the reading session:

He had been genuinely excited about the 8 year old book he’d picked up. It was a new one in a series he used to read as a younger kid. He’d been actively sitting and reading, and then he was embarrassed in front of his classmates, told off for reading a kids book, and voila. He lost all enthusiasm for reading anything else that day.
What’s worse? That kid had been hit by a car like a year and a half earlier. Severe brain trauma. Had to re-learn a lot of basic things, like how to speak and how to read.
An 8 year old book would have been perfect for him. Easy enough to read that it would have helped rebuild his confidence in his own reading ability. A book meant for 15/16 years olds? A lot harder to read than a book for 8 year olds. Especially if you’re recovering from a relatively recent brain injury.
And yeah, the teacher knew all about his brain injury, and the recovery. He just seemed go be of the opinion that the kid was 15, so he should be reading books for 15 year olds, irrespective of brain injury.
Reading this thread I’m reminded of Daniel Pennae’s The Rights of the Reader, which can be found in a lot of bookshops and school libraries:

The child speaking at the bottom in Quentin Blake’s distinctive spiky handwriting is saying ‘10 rights, 1 warning: Don’t make fun of people who don’t read - or they never will’
I remember at one point at my old school, I’d read so much one year for that AR test thing that they banned me from the Library just cause I was reading so much.
I was given detention for reading a book “above my reading level” even though I had tested high enough and gotten a parent permission slip…
Why do they hate kids learning and enjoying themselves so much?
@keyhollow you needed… a permission slip to read a difficult book?? what??
Yup, because due to it being above my reading level it could “cause stress and have adult topics!”
It was Harry Potter by the way
I remember I had to write an essay back in year 8 (about age 13/14idh) about why I wanted to take out a comic book from my school’s library as my teacher thought all comics (no matter what) were for kids and we had to grow up
It was Marvel’s Civil War, so I did a shit ton kf research and put that bitch on blast in my essay bc of the little english writing troglodyte I used to be
Still got after school detention for it though
In middle school, either 6th or 7th grade, we did a segment on reading graphic novels and comics. My friend and I were really into manga, and I was reading Soul Eater at the time, and I wanted to do my report on a volume of that. My teacher said manga wasn’t “real comics” and made me read some fuckin stupid book about a girl with braces instead. She didn’t even give me a valid reason like it being a bit too mature for the class, or the fact that it’s not a complete story and is part of a bigger story. No, it’s because it was manga and not something American.
Honestly, parents/teachers really need to understand/come to terms with the idea that childrens/students should be allowed to consume what interests the them, not what interested the parents/teachers, ESPECIALLY when they’re old enough to know what they’re interested in.
Sure, there’s a number of things we (many of us feel this way, I figure) got into cuz we were introduced to it despite our protests, because we all had times where we were afraid of getting into something new and we should expand our horizons. But eventually they should realize that if we KNOW there’s something we aren’t interested in, forcing the issue will guarantee it sucks for everyone.
The better years of my life definitely came when my parents eventually realized that, no matter what, I just didn’t take to learning the piano/trumpet or playing sports, and stopped trying to force me and just let me do what appealed to me.