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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 3:18 am 
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 7:05 am 
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A few things to consider.

Was involved in proctoring exams given to all undergrads while in grad school, the lowest performing majors were education and law enforcement.

Many segments of the population do not value education, there is very little respect for teachers or schools in segments of society.

There is no incentive for a classroom teacher to perform, everyone is on the same steps and lanes, as with most unions there is an emphasis on maintaining the status quo, the nail that stands up gets hammered down.

There are teachers that do incredible work every single day.

Other countries place a much higher value on education and there are numerous countries that put kids though standardized testing at relatively early ages, those tests determine what career field they will be dropped into and there is very little deviation allowed, so parents that have the means will heavily invest in their kids education from early childhood until Junior High when the test are administered.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 7:49 am 
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Clawmaster wrote:
.
There is no incentive for a classroom teacher to perform, everyone is on the same steps and lanes, as with most unions there is an emphasis on maintaining the status quo,

This is an incredibly ignorant statement.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 7:50 am 
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Nas wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nas wrote:
MANY teachers don't like guidance..

They definitely don't like taking direction from people that have never did the work. Which is one of the problems with the CEO/LSC model that is currently in place. Teachers will take direction from people that actually know what they are talking about or at least that has been my experience anyway.


Some teachers don't want guidance that makes them uncomfortable in any way. It doesn't matter if the principal has classroom experience or not. When it comes to the hiring process, you know network chiefs place their thumbs on the scale and paper LSCs fall in line. In other cases, an LSC doesn't exist.

I think giving vested members of the community a voice is important. Far to often, administrators run schools like a dictator. With very little oversight from network chiefs.


Education is like most professions in this respect. You have to have seen people actually do the work. In most cases you haven't and deferring to people simply because of their job titles is a rather flawed premise and one that has failed MANY a school.
And just because someone is an administrator does not mean that they are a good administrator. Actually most aren't these days as MANY of the people that would be good at it don't really want the job.
When I first started in CPS you had really good, experienced people running schools. People that I was more than happy to take direction from in most cases. That no longer is the case. In most cases these days what you have are "straight to video" Admin types that have spent very little time in the classroom and select to run to Administration to A. Get out of the Classroom as fast as they can because they hate teaching and B. Get out of the classroom as fast as they can so that they can make more money.
On the flip side of that are a ton of veteran teachers that would be great at Administration but don't want to transition out of their "cushy" teaching spot because A. Outside of principal any other position in Administration would be a pay cut and B. There is no protection for you if the principal gets whacked. You go if they go in most cases. With this being the case why do it at all?
So in today's arena what you have in their stead are people that don't know shit who expect you to defer to them simply because of their position and job title. For the most part that shit has been a terrible mistake as it might cost you your entire career if you "defer" wrong. I have seen it happen in too many instances to just believe otherwise.

In the case of LSCs there are many which place their interests ahead of the schools which they are supposed to be manning in a lot of cases. By that I mean they don't care as much about hiring the "best candidate" as much as they care about hiring the person that they can control or "feel most comfortable working with". It's a running joke as to how principals and those who look to be principal have stacked the deck on LSCs with "their people" so that they will receive little to no oversight from the LSC. In return for said favor, the principal is expected to rubber stamp any and everything which the LSCs tells it to rubber stamp. Usually in the form of enrollment for one of their kids or friends kids and people that they want hired for jobs.

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Technically I was drunk (big surprise) and asked her if she liked a tongue up her ass.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 8:52 am 
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LSC have a very limited charter. They are not meant to be involved in teacher hiring or the manner of instruction. They are really there to guide the principal

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 9:03 am 
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good dolphin wrote:
LSC have a very limited charter. They are not meant to be involved in teacher hiring or the manner of instruction. They are really there to guide the principal


They may not be "meant" to do this in theory but it is exactly what happens in practice. See the turnaround scam that was perpetrated on MANY schools until the system realized that it was a crock of shit program and decided to discontinue it. LSCs were heavily involved in the hiring of teachers and other staff members.
The influence of LSCs extends well beyond just simply hiring principals. They also are in control of budgets as well as they have to sign off on them.

And I don't say this to suggest that I'm "anti LSC" either. I just think that in too MANY instances they have been and are politicized to the detriment of the schools which they are supposed to serve.

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pittmike wrote:
Technically I was drunk (big surprise) and asked her if she liked a tongue up her ass.


Frank Coztansa wrote:
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 9:20 am 
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The Missing Link wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
LSC have a very limited charter. They are not meant to be involved in teacher hiring or the manner of instruction. They are really there to guide the principal


They may not be "meant" to do this in theory but it is exactly what happens in practice. See the turnaround scam that was perpetrated on MANY schools until the system realized that it was a crock of shit program and decided to discontinue it. LSCs were heavily involved in the hiring of teachers and other staff members.
The influence of LSCs extends well beyond just simply hiring principals. They also are in control of budgets as well as they have to sign off on them.

And I don't say this to suggest that I'm "anti LSC" either. I just think that in too MANY instances they have been and are politicized to the detriment of the schools which they are supposed to serve.


Politics is being played in every school building in the country. Besides, there aren't many strong LSCs left. There is essentially no check on the principal in the overwhelming majority of schools.

To your earlier point, an LSC is supposed to work in the interest of the entire school. Far too many members make votes based on what's best for their family or whatever political career they are trying to get off the ground. There are a lot of lawyers and judges who are trying to fluff their political resumes.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 10:13 am 
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OscarTangoEcho wrote:
I’m the guy that punches Jimmy Stewart in the face in It’s a Wonderful Life

My wife has been teaching for nearly 4 decades, all of it 1st grade. She’s a legend at her school, and still works tirelessly. It’s absolutely amazing to me how a parent of any child could just blow off these conferences. Jesus, is there anything more important than your child? What is more pressing…your job, your fantasy football team? And other than safety and nutrition, what is more important to their future than their education.

You’re telling me you can’t find 15 fucking minutes a fucking year to go and see the kids classroom, look at his work at get some honest feedback of your child, face-to-face with someone that cares for your child. The fuck is wrong with you people.

Look I’m not naïve, not all teachers are good, and some are bad, but most of them care more about your child than obviously some of you do.

Great post. Your wife sounds like a great person. God bless her.

There are definitely bad teachers and one who are not in it for the right reasons. But there are still a bunch of good ones left and not all places have an agenda.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 10:18 am 
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RFDC wrote:
OscarTangoEcho wrote:
I’m the guy that punches Jimmy Stewart in the face in It’s a Wonderful Life

My wife has been teaching for nearly 4 decades, all of it 1st grade. She’s a legend at her school, and still works tirelessly. It’s absolutely amazing to me how a parent of any child could just blow off these conferences. Jesus, is there anything more important than your child? What is more pressing…your job, your fantasy football team? And other than safety and nutrition, what is more important to their future than their education.

You’re telling me you can’t find 15 fucking minutes a fucking year to go and see the kids classroom, look at his work at get some honest feedback of your child, face-to-face with someone that cares for your child. The fuck is wrong with you people.

Look I’m not naïve, not all teachers are good, and some are bad, but most of them care more about your child than obviously some of you do.

Great post. Your wife sounds like a great person. God bless her.

There are definitely bad teachers and one who are not in it for the right reasons. But there are still a bunch of good ones left and not all places have an agenda.


Agreed. Like any profession there will be bad employees. Education is no different. There are bad teachers and in some cases terrible teachers. However the system is not littered with them.
There are a ton of teachers that care and in MANY cases might care too much. That's why a great number of them get burned out and quit well before they are able to retire. As I'm sure you know.

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Technically I was drunk (big surprise) and asked her if she liked a tongue up her ass.


Frank Coztansa wrote:
Again, your comprehension needs work.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 12:19 pm 
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How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 12:20 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Shots taken at firemen.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 1:12 pm 
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The Missing Link wrote:
RFDC wrote:
OscarTangoEcho wrote:
I’m the guy that punches Jimmy Stewart in the face in It’s a Wonderful Life

My wife has been teaching for nearly 4 decades, all of it 1st grade. She’s a legend at her school, and still works tirelessly. It’s absolutely amazing to me how a parent of any child could just blow off these conferences. Jesus, is there anything more important than your child? What is more pressing…your job, your fantasy football team? And other than safety and nutrition, what is more important to their future than their education.

You’re telling me you can’t find 15 fucking minutes a fucking year to go and see the kids classroom, look at his work at get some honest feedback of your child, face-to-face with someone that cares for your child. The fuck is wrong with you people.

Look I’m not naïve, not all teachers are good, and some are bad, but most of them care more about your child than obviously some of you do.

Great post. Your wife sounds like a great person. God bless her.

There are definitely bad teachers and one who are not in it for the right reasons. But there are still a bunch of good ones left and not all places have an agenda.


Agreed. Like any profession there will be bad employees. Education is no different. There are bad teachers and in some cases terrible teachers. However the system is not littered with them.
There are a ton of teachers that care and in MANY cases might care too much. That's why a great number of them get burned out and quit well before they are able to retire. As I'm sure you know.

Unlike most professions, however, bad teachers are protected and immune to reprimand and / or termination. This isn't unique to teachers and I'm not anti-union...it's just a reality. A majority of private sector jobs do not have that protection and it's much easier to get rid of bad employees.

Not exactly an apples to apples comparison. I fully agree there are more good teachers than bad teachers so don't group me in the teacher bashing group. The education problems sit fully in politics and bloated administration

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 1:58 pm 
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Nas wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
good dolphin wrote:
LSC have a very limited charter. They are not meant to be involved in teacher hiring or the manner of instruction. They are really there to guide the principal


They may not be "meant" to do this in theory but it is exactly what happens in practice. See the turnaround scam that was perpetrated on MANY schools until the system realized that it was a crock of shit program and decided to discontinue it. LSCs were heavily involved in the hiring of teachers and other staff members.
The influence of LSCs extends well beyond just simply hiring principals. They also are in control of budgets as well as they have to sign off on them.

And I don't say this to suggest that I'm "anti LSC" either. I just think that in too MANY instances they have been and are politicized to the detriment of the schools which they are supposed to serve.


Politics is being played in every school building in the country. Besides, there aren't many strong LSCs left. There is essentially no check on the principal in the overwhelming majority of schools.

To your earlier point, an LSC is supposed to work in the interest of the entire school. Far too many members make votes based on what's best for their family or whatever political career they are trying to get off the ground. There are a lot of lawyers and judges who are trying to fluff their political resumes.


Hey

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 2:00 pm 
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my wife insisted we go to second semester senior year parent teacher conferences.

She knows we'll go to Tuscany afterwards every time.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 2:34 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.

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Frank Coztansa wrote:
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 2:37 pm 
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 2:50 pm 
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The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.


Yeah, MANY are exhausted by their own 1 or 2 kids after a few minutes. Kids they actually love. Dealing with over 100 kids a day for hours isn't a walk in the park.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 3:23 pm 
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Nas wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.


Yeah, MANY are exhausted by their own 1 or 2 kids after a few minutes. Kids they actually love. Dealing with over 100 kids a day for hours isn't a walk in the park.

But then you get a monday off, then a wed, thurs, friday, then a christmas break, then a couple more mondays off, then a spring break, then a summer break. What high stress job lets you do that? Brain surgeon, maybe?


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 3:54 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
Nas wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.


Yeah, MANY are exhausted by their own 1 or 2 kids after a few minutes. Kids they actually love. Dealing with over 100 kids a day for hours isn't a walk in the park.

But then you get a monday off, then a wed, thurs, friday, then a christmas break, then a couple more mondays off, then a spring break, then a summer break. What high stress job lets you do that? Brain surgeon, maybe?


They're taking home the work too. Firefighters have a similar setup. Except most days aren't stressful for them.

Truthfully, cops should get far more days off too. Instead, they get mandatory overtime. Theoretically, MANY should perform better with those breaks. That's good for us and our kids.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 3:55 pm 
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I think all of our teachers try hard.

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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 7:29 pm 
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Nardi wrote:
Nas wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.


Yeah, MANY are exhausted by their own 1 or 2 kids after a few minutes. Kids they actually love. Dealing with over 100 kids a day for hours isn't a walk in the park.

But then you get a monday off, then a wed, thurs, friday, then a christmas break, then a couple more mondays off, then a spring break, then a summer break. What high stress job lets you do that? Brain surgeon, maybe?


What other job makes someone responsible for managing over a 100 kids all while dealing with a bunch of shitty adults on a daily basis?

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Technically I was drunk (big surprise) and asked her if she liked a tongue up her ass.


Frank Coztansa wrote:
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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 9:39 pm 
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Harvard Dan wrote:

I mean even the best student's have something that might be improved (or something to consider when transitioning towards high school). It drives me nuts when I hear these stories about teachers saying their kid is "doing great" and that's about it.


You can tell who prepares for them and if they know your kid. It's appreciated and it's rare.


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 9:58 pm 
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The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.

120 kids on zoom doesn't count dude


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PostPosted: Wed Nov 23, 2022 10:24 pm 
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Another teacher bashing thread. How original.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 24, 2022 9:03 am 
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The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
Nas wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.


Yeah, MANY are exhausted by their own 1 or 2 kids after a few minutes. Kids they actually love. Dealing with over 100 kids a day for hours isn't a walk in the park.

But then you get a monday off, then a wed, thurs, friday, then a christmas break, then a couple more mondays off, then a spring break, then a summer break. What high stress job lets you do that? Brain surgeon, maybe?


What other job makes someone responsible for managing over a 100 kids all while dealing with a bunch of shitty adults on a daily basis?


Try keeping people alive, dealing with addicts who are screaming and threatening you and your staff while severely understaffed during a global pandemic.

Always find these discussions entertaining because I've actually seen behind the curtain, do find the seemingly endless efforts at obfuscation somewhat charming, kind of like a teenage girl when you make fun of her favorite boy band.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 24, 2022 9:18 am 
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Being a ref. That's seems stressful.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 24, 2022 9:19 am 
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Brick wrote:
I think all of our teachers try hard.



Agreed.

But respect is earned in life.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 24, 2022 10:03 am 
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Clawmaster wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
Nas wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.


Yeah, MANY are exhausted by their own 1 or 2 kids after a few minutes. Kids they actually love. Dealing with over 100 kids a day for hours isn't a walk in the park.

But then you get a monday off, then a wed, thurs, friday, then a christmas break, then a couple more mondays off, then a spring break, then a summer break. What high stress job lets you do that? Brain surgeon, maybe?


What other job makes someone responsible for managing over a 100 kids all while dealing with a bunch of shitty adults on a daily basis?


Try keeping people alive, dealing with addicts who are screaming and threatening you and your staff while severely understaffed during a global pandemic.


Forget about merely"threatening" anyone . I have worked in a school where one teacher had his head split by a student that cracked him with a chair. While another one had his ribs caved in by another one that stomped the hell out of him with a pair of Timberlands. And still another one will never be able to lift her left arm ever again after being attacked by another student. One teacher dropped dead while chasing a student that tried to attack her inside of a classroom. And those are just SOME of the things which I can remember happening over the years.

Education isn't beanbag by any stretch of the imagination and anyone who believes it is is simply being ignorant.

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PostPosted: Thu Nov 24, 2022 10:06 am 
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Caller Bob wrote:
The Missing Link wrote:
Nardi wrote:
How do you get burned out working 180 days a year?


Try working with 120-150 children per day 5 days per week and you will find out very easily. Particularly when you never take time away for yourself for the most part.

Teaching (particularly in "urban environments") is hardly a picnic.

120 kids on zoom doesn't count dude


But making the same repetitive post over and over does count? Just Asking A Question

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Technically I was drunk (big surprise) and asked her if she liked a tongue up her ass.


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PostPosted: Thu Nov 24, 2022 10:10 am 
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There are a lot of hard jobs out here. Not just teaching. I don't ever want to say that there aren't.

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Technically I was drunk (big surprise) and asked her if she liked a tongue up her ass.


Frank Coztansa wrote:
Again, your comprehension needs work.


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