
I saw this: ‘I’m giving up eating chocolate for a month.’ The meaning’s pretty straightforward.
It was rewritten: ‘I’m giving up. Eating chocolate for a month.’ The meaning’s a bit different!
What did the writer really mean?

Children in Lowestoft returned to school yesterday… smiling, fresh faced children… Some will have said, ‘I hate school’; really they’re pleased to be back… ’I hate my uniform’ may be said with force, but there’s no real resentment… ‘School’s fine’ may cover a number of anxieties and concerns…
What do the children really mean?
Comments from proud parents and family friends can also hide a heap of worries… Will he get on with his new teacher? Will she keep out of trouble? Will they cope in the new big school? I don’t like getting older. I don’t like losing control of my babies. Am I a good parent?’
What do the parents really mean?

Jesus talked about a mother giving birth to a baby… the cries of pain and distress alongside the joy of the safe arrival.
I was an inactive observer at the birth of our three children… I don’t pretend to be an expert… but I think I understand what he was saying….
Mixed emotions, mixed feelings, words don’t always convey complete meaning. I can honestly say I’m happy but also feel sad; I can trust my child to be OK and keep out of trouble (whatever their age!!) but still be anxious.

Brennan Manning says: ‘…I am a bundle of paradoxes. I believe and I doubt, I hope and I get discouraged, I love and I hate, I feel bad about being good, I feel guilty about not feeling guilty. I am trusting and suspicious. I am honest and I still play games. Aristotle said I am a rational animal; I say I am an angel with an incredible capacity for beer.’
Today I’m content that I don’t always make sense, that I don’t always understand what I really mean… but that’s OK.
The punctuation does it for the change in meaning(s). 😁
As a mom, who carried her child in her womb for 9 months, the pain was real. But I eventually felt relieved when she arrived at last. Everything just went away and I beamed with pride as I welcomed her into this world. And just like you, Sir, I trust my daughter “to be okay and out of trouble, and still be anxious” (to borrow your words). But it’s fine, I’m a parent, after all. 😊
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You’re right – being a parent does bring very mixed emptions… and it doesn’t stop when your children grow up.
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How often do people say that they are fine, but they’re not fine? Sometimes their body language communicates a different message.
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You’re right Nancy. Sometimes when folks say ‘I’m fine’ you have to ask yourself – or them- ‘What do you really mean?’
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Thanks for sharing this idea Anita
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Good to hear from you, Anita
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