J: Can we donate some of my toys? To poor kids, not bratty ones.
J: I am lucky my parents are rich so that is why I am going to give my money to the poor.
V to me: You are a good boy mamá.
V: I will get in big trouble? Or in tiny tiny trouble?
J, trying to throw his notebook away: I lost my talent. I cannot draw anymore.
J: When I grow up, do you think I will be like (tío) D or how I am now?
J on his new teacher: She is stressed out because she is having a baby.
M on her new teacher who seems less strict than expected: She isn't hardening. She isn's messing around but she is not that strict.
M on J's teacher: You need to do stellar behavior now at the beginning of the year.
V as I walked out the door with eyeliner on: Mamá, are you a princess?
J: I do ask for a lot of stuff don't I?
V, the morning after a rough bedtime: I am done with my time out.
what does being like tio d mean?
ReplyDeletei do not know. he got very frustrated when i tried to get what that meant. the conversation did not go far. i asked, tall? a piano player? funny? not sure he even knew....
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