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1. If you saw a dog locked in a hot car, what would you do? First, I'd call the police. This is why it's good that each of us always has a phone. Then I would go to the nearest business and ask if them to make an announcement, in case the owner is nearby.
2. Is it easy for you to accept help when you need it? No, but I'm working on it. It's the lasting lesson I learned from Elizabeth Edwards' book. Relationships are stronger -- we are each stronger -- when we ask for and accept help.
3. Have you ever been in a fashion show? No.
4. Would you like to be famous? No. I think the scrutiny and judgement would make me crazy. I would, however, love to be really rich.
5. What is your most compulsive habit? I press the elevator button, even if someone else has already called for the elevator.
6. What do you most strive for in your life: accomplishment, security, love, power, excitement, knowledge, or something else? Something else. (Happiness, to be specific.)
So not my family |
7.How close and warm is your family? Ha!
8. Does that fact that you have never done a thing before increase or decrease its appeal to you? Depends on what it is. Space travel? Yes. Haven't done it, not at all interested. Visit Quebec? Haven't done it but curious about it.
9. If your friends start belittling a common acquaintance, would you defend that person? Depends on the person. What did they do? Were they incompetent or cruel? Or are my friends just making fun of a sweater they're wearing. Big difference.
10. Do you make a special effort to thank someone who does you a favor? Yes. How do you react when you aren’t thanked for going out of your way for someone? I'm sad.
11. Since adolescence, in what 3-year period do you feel you experienced the most personal growth and change? 21 to 24. I went from a secretary to a copywriter, from having a job to having a career.
12. When you do something ridiculous, how much does it bother you to have other people notice it and laugh at you? Depends.
13. Do you believe in capital punishment? No. I've written about this before, BUT my friend John was on a jury that sentenced a man to death. Years later, it was proven that the man was innocent, and that the police beat a false confession from the defendant. John was heartsick and deeply depressed that he was nearly responsible for an innocent man's death.
If the state decides that taking a life is necessary, then the JUDGE should take responsibility, not just some citizen who is doing his duty by serving on a jury.
14. Do you find it so hard to say “no” that you regularly do favors you do not want to do? Yes.
15. What, if anything, is too serious to be joked about? Yes. Disabilities. Whether it's Serge Kovaleski, the Washington Post reporter who won a Pulitzer Prize despite a congenital joint condition, or Greta Thunberg, who became Time's Person of the Year despite battling Asperger, the President of the United States should not mock their disabilities. It's one thing to attack their work, but he imitated Kovaleski's deformed hand and speech, and Thunberg's difficulty in modulating. He is making fun of things they cannot help, and that's ugly.
Donald Trump should be too grateful to God that he, his five children and ten grandchildren are healthy to behave this way. And I worry about what children think when they see adults applaud the most powerful man in the free world as he mocks the disabled.