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Posted

My dear old father was one for embarking on challenging projects, with limited success. My perception was that the successes were more limited than the incompletions, and it put me off projects.  When I think about it now, I think maybe my childish perception was skewed.   

Posted

Take 1 and multiply it by 1 (OK, I lost half the chat), then add infinity and cube it....then take all the matter in the universe and double it every nanosecond for the next 19 trillion years and add the values together.  

 

not sure what a plodder and a plonker is but OK matey bloke I'm just taking a piss you wonker <deleted>.   this is some ancient form of English, I presume.   

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Posted
6 minutes ago, hotsun said:

I remember my father whipped me with a belt and kept me locked in his car for a couple hours while he worked.


Was that in the hot sun surrounded by lunatic republicans?

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Posted
1 minute ago, Terrance8812 said:


Was that in the hot sun surrounded by lunatic republicans?

That was in california before it became insane

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Posted
25 minutes ago, hankypankee said:

 

I can’t even tell if the subject of this topic is a question or a statement because it’s so poorly written. Then, I might have responded with something about my own personal experiences, but since you didn’t share any information about your own father, and just threw out a hollow subject title, there’s really nothing to engage with here. 

 

It’s like being handed an empty photo frame and being asked to describe the picture — there’s nothing to look at.

 

And then you say "Now plodders and plonkers give it a go". But why would anybody even respond after you just called them plodders and plonkers? So why don't you give it all a go?

Plonker

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Posted
Just now, Terrance8812 said:


I don't think Harris can even give it a go. I've never seen him write anything intelligent or meaningful. So don't hold your breath. 

Stalker

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Posted
47 minutes ago, EVENKEEL said:

My old man was probably the best father anyone could ever hope to have. 

Did he teach you skills or just be a good person?

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Posted

He taught me to work hard and save money. Stopped my pocket money for one year when I was 12 to pay for damage when I threw a stone at my brother but missed, and scratched my dad's new car instead (Austin Allegro). Told me to go and get a job, so I did - a paper round. After one year I asked for my pocket money back, but he told me I didn't need it as I was already earning money for myself. Had part-time and summer jobs until I left the UK at 19 and came here in 1982. Been here ever since.  

Posted

He taught me if I wanted something, I had to earn it for myself. No-one was going to give it to me.

 

He taught me to avoid debt like the plague. Delay gratification until I had the cash.

 

He was cheated out of an inheritance, which taught me they can rip families to shreds, and bring out the worst in people.

 

He worked in a job he hated for 40 years. It made me determined I would not.

 

BTW, I love mince pies.

 

 

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Posted
1 hour ago, Harrisfan said:

Thanks for the topic.

 

Now plodders and plonkers give it a go

Did you have a dad ?

 

regards Worgeordie

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Posted
45 minutes ago, hotsun said:

so he cant be surprised that i dont talk to him anymore.

Harden up, you probably deserved it.

My dad belted me when I deserved it, but I still get along great with him. 

Spare the rod spoil the child.

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Posted
16 minutes ago, Lacessit said:

He taught me if I wanted something, I had to earn it for myself. No-one was going to give it to me.

I thought you had previously revealed that you live off the Australian welfare system?

Sorry if I have you mixed up with someone else?

 

I know a lot of people feel entitled to welfare and handouts.

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Posted

I will always miss my dad who passed away at the age of 94. Simple hardworking man with no bad habits, he always did his best for the family. Along with mum, they carefully controlled all unnecessary expenditure and wisely spent the money on giving us all a good education. I remember the day when I proudly handed over my first salary to him. He handed it back and taught me to save a part of each month's salary for the future, which I still do. 

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Posted

My dad was a poor Scot who struggled his whole life to put food on the table and a roof over his (and our) heads. Probably the greatest thing he taught me was to live within my means, to budget and keep within that budget, and if you want something you save up and pay cash, and if you can't afford it then you don't get it (the only exception to this philosophy being buying a house). So I became an excellent money manager, and have spent the majority of my life debt free. I've never owned a credit card, but have a couple of debit cards for use when paying online.

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Posted

My dad spent years in the British Army (REME), travelling to very many countries.  So, I got the army discipline so I knew where I stood, a wanderlust (yeah, both countries and women) but not the same as grain (reply above); a good financial sense (I got that from my mother).  I could also fix my own cars, bikes and do lots of DIY around the home (but disciplined enough to know what I don't know).

 

My dad died about 33 years ago; I've travelled to more countries than he was able to, and I've worked in more too.  Not sure about the women count though 😆.

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