Coming Soon đ At the beginning of April, youâll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
When I was in first (or second?), grade we had a student teacher who gave us a worksheet. Part way through I realized that every studentâs name was in that worksheet. I was really excited to look for mine. Finally there it was: âDavid canât see the board.â I was devastated. Shortly after that I had to get glasses. Over 50 years later and I can still remember the embarrassment I felt. :(
I, for one, donât get the âstoopidâ when talking or thinking. Writing, yes, but arenât âstoopidâ and âstupidâ pronounced the same? Is âstoopidâ the Canadian spelling of âstupidâ?
I think Iâve said before that the word âstoopidâ ruffled a lot of readersâ feathers. Many times I had to explain that despite the spelling, this is the way some words sound. They were not appeased. Artistic license is not necessarily a license to misspell!
Back in the âolden daysâ (when I was in grade school), it was not common to take kids to an eye exam. The common assumption was that people didnât need glasses until they got older. I had no idea why I couldnât understand what was on the distant chalk board, (since my last name started with a letter toward the end of the alphabet, I sat at the back of the class) until the day I walked to the board and saw words and math problems. These were the days before the common availability of polio vaccine (Salk actually got permission to test it through our schools in Pittsburgh), and parents were more terrified of the âsummer diseaseâ of polio. Family doctors rarely asked if we had trouble seeingâŠ
We do hearing and eye tests at public school here in NC three times. I think eyes are Kindergarten, first, and third. Hearing is maybe K, 2, and 4. That way, even kids whose parents donât take them in get at least a basic check that they can see and hear reasonably. We donât want this to happen.
My middle child is the only one who has gone to an eye doctor. She struggled with reading when the letters in books got smaller (far-sighted, though since corrected itself). The others ace the yearly eye exam at the regular doctorâs office and show no signs of struggling to see anything. We should take them, though. Our son is almost the age where eye strain did me in, and since he is reading on a computer or in a book almost as much as I did, he is at risk. I did bring all the kids to this daughterâs check-up (age 8). I had told them it was a longer version of the eye chart they had already done, so hopefully they werenât too scared. After they saw what their sister did, they will never worry again, for sure.
capricorn9th over 5 years ago
I understand saying âstoopidâ but she THINKS it too. So, yes, she has a problem.
Templo S.U.D. over 5 years ago
what pain could one possibly get from visiting the eye doctor (aside from maybe dilating the pupils with a special liquid)?
howtheduck over 5 years ago
Reading? In that last panel, it looks like she is eating the book.
Watcher over 5 years ago
You donât know Elizabeth as well as you think Ellie.
jpayne4040 over 5 years ago
I wouldnât be too sure of that, Ellie.
dv1093 over 5 years ago
Iâm quite the old guy, and I still enjoy reading the Highlights when I visit the Doctorâs office â especially the Hidden Pictures.
jlsnell327 over 5 years ago
Wait, why did she not ask Elizabeth directly? She is old enough to speak for herself!
gooddavid over 5 years ago
When I was in first (or second?), grade we had a student teacher who gave us a worksheet. Part way through I realized that every studentâs name was in that worksheet. I was really excited to look for mine. Finally there it was: âDavid canât see the board.â I was devastated. Shortly after that I had to get glasses. Over 50 years later and I can still remember the embarrassment I felt. :(
Asrial over 5 years ago
Poor girl. âEven though I walk through the valley of the eye doctor, I shall fear no evil.â
JD'Huntsville'AL over 5 years ago
I, for one, donât get the âstoopidâ when talking or thinking. Writing, yes, but arenât âstoopidâ and âstupidâ pronounced the same? Is âstoopidâ the Canadian spelling of âstupidâ?
Ginny Premium Member over 5 years ago
I still get anxious when Iâm visiting a new physician for a new problem. Itâs not only the kids who feel this way.
ElaineFisherManning over 5 years ago
This just goes to show that people will argue about ANYTHING ⊠just to argue.
Mumblix Premium Member over 5 years ago
Lynnâs Comments:
I think Iâve said before that the word âstoopidâ ruffled a lot of readersâ feathers. Many times I had to explain that despite the spelling, this is the way some words sound. They were not appeased. Artistic license is not necessarily a license to misspell!
Source: fborfw.com/strip_fix
Argythree over 5 years ago
Back in the âolden daysâ (when I was in grade school), it was not common to take kids to an eye exam. The common assumption was that people didnât need glasses until they got older. I had no idea why I couldnât understand what was on the distant chalk board, (since my last name started with a letter toward the end of the alphabet, I sat at the back of the class) until the day I walked to the board and saw words and math problems. These were the days before the common availability of polio vaccine (Salk actually got permission to test it through our schools in Pittsburgh), and parents were more terrified of the âsummer diseaseâ of polio. Family doctors rarely asked if we had trouble seeingâŠ
masnadies over 5 years ago
We do hearing and eye tests at public school here in NC three times. I think eyes are Kindergarten, first, and third. Hearing is maybe K, 2, and 4. That way, even kids whose parents donât take them in get at least a basic check that they can see and hear reasonably. We donât want this to happen.
My middle child is the only one who has gone to an eye doctor. She struggled with reading when the letters in books got smaller (far-sighted, though since corrected itself). The others ace the yearly eye exam at the regular doctorâs office and show no signs of struggling to see anything. We should take them, though. Our son is almost the age where eye strain did me in, and since he is reading on a computer or in a book almost as much as I did, he is at risk. I did bring all the kids to this daughterâs check-up (age 8). I had told them it was a longer version of the eye chart they had already done, so hopefully they werenât too scared. After they saw what their sister did, they will never worry again, for sure.Petemejia77 over 5 years ago
No âHighlightsâ mags?