Where I was, at that age, there was no “preschool” nor “kindergarten.” I wandered the fields & taste tested the crops. Horse corn is better before it’s turned into corn-nuts or hominy.
I can totally relate. Preschool wasn’t common when I was little, and when my mom asked me if I’d be interested in it, I was like, “Nah, I’m good.” I was happy with the status quo, like Agnes. When I got sentenced to kindergarten a year later, I felt like life as it was meant to be had come to an end.
seanfear 6 months ago
drama queen i see
snsurone76 6 months ago
What is “Morder”? And how does Agnes know about it?
JLChi 6 months ago
Nothing like a positive attitude to get you through the day.
LeftCoastKen Premium Member 6 months ago
Good one, Tony … the onset of a new direction for Agnes, or more of a one-off?
baraktorvan 6 months ago
Wait until you get sentenced to elementary, junior, and high. It will be 12 years of complete and total misery.
Then if you are lucky, you get 4 or 5 years of parties and rushes along with drudgery in university.
ChukLitl Premium Member 6 months ago
Where I was, at that age, there was no “preschool” nor “kindergarten.” I wandered the fields & taste tested the crops. Horse corn is better before it’s turned into corn-nuts or hominy.
Skeptical Meg 6 months ago
I like her spin.
The Orange Mailman 6 months ago
In my mind, Merle Haggard and LOTR don’t go together.
monya_43 6 months ago
They did manage to teach Agnes how to write and spell in spite of her lack of desire for knowledge.
mindjob 6 months ago
This book will never sell unless she adds stuff about puppies
Brent Rosenthal Premium Member 6 months ago
As creative as she is, she has a future as a writer!
christelisbetty 6 months ago
I hear the train, a comin’, it’s runnin’ round the bend……….
gopher gofer 6 months ago
looking back now, “mordor” perfectly captures how i felt about middle school and high school…
B.comics.61 6 months ago
I can totally relate. Preschool wasn’t common when I was little, and when my mom asked me if I’d be interested in it, I was like, “Nah, I’m good.” I was happy with the status quo, like Agnes. When I got sentenced to kindergarten a year later, I felt like life as it was meant to be had come to an end.