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âBe grateful for luck. Pay the thunder no mind; listen to the birds. And donât hate nobody.â âJames Hubert âEubieâ Blake (1887-1983) American pianist and composer
By the way, I have never had an issue with participation trophies. Itâs not like anyone is confusing them for the winnerâs trophy, and nobody takes them for anything more than a nice memento of the particular event or season they participated in. The whole attitude of, âOf youâre not a winner, you get nothing,â is silly in my opinion.
As with many âquick drawâ mouths, kid only looked at the surface of the subject. Hope this lesson sticks with him when other opportunities arise.
Plainwell gave good advice. One way to make friends is to be thoughtful of what one says. A âsnarkâ doesnât only affect the target but also those who observe it.
I have nothing but awed respect for anyone who even attempts a marathon, iron man, birkie, triathlon, etc. The amount of dedication necessary just to try it is off the charts as far as Iâm concerned. Same goes for things like learning how to play a musical instrument well enuf to perform in public. Iâm content just to muddle along in comfortable mediocrity and admire the accomplished from afar.
I think Miss Plainwell blows it in the second panel, when she fails to point out that the medal is not given for participating, but for finishing. Big difference. Even if you are DLBF in a marathon, you have actually done something. âParticipationâ trophies are just for showing up, and itâs something the kid should understand.
Thereâs winners and there is non-winners, the most important things are, did you do your best and did you do it the right way. Some of these things nowadays where scores are not kept and everyone is a winner is not how things work in the real world.
Ms. Plainwell might have finished in the top 10%. But not necessarily, since everyone who finishes gets a finisherâs medal â not just those who finish in the top 10%. Even the runner who finishes last gets one. Thatâs why itâs called a âfinisherâs medal.â
Admittedly, her statement in the 2nd frame is somewhat ambiguous. I think she means that only about 10% of those who try to run the Boston Marathon (send in the necessary paperwork, etc.) are good enough (i.e., fast enough) to be allowed to run the course that day. Thatâs the âabout top 10 percentâ that Ms. Plainwell is in â and thatâs just one more reason why she is so impressive.
Richard S Russell Premium Member 10 months ago
âBe grateful for luck. Pay the thunder no mind; listen to the birds. And donât hate nobody.â âJames Hubert âEubieâ Blake (1887-1983) American pianist and composer
WelshRat Premium Member 10 months ago
The world is made more fun by snark.
Bilan 10 months ago
The Boston Marathon is one of the few things, besides playoffs, where youâre a winner just to be invited.
diazch408 10 months ago
Cool lesson, Miss Plainwell.
Doug K 10 months ago
Aw ⊠no snarky comments? ⊠Is sarcasm okay?
Charles 10 months ago
Participation trophies were always a stupid, counterproductive idea.
Ninette 10 months ago
Go to college and get a participation degree, kid.
cdward 10 months ago
By the way, I have never had an issue with participation trophies. Itâs not like anyone is confusing them for the winnerâs trophy, and nobody takes them for anything more than a nice memento of the particular event or season they participated in. The whole attitude of, âOf youâre not a winner, you get nothing,â is silly in my opinion.
William Robbins Premium Member 10 months ago
Arenât comics pretty much snarky comments?
sandpiper 10 months ago
As with many âquick drawâ mouths, kid only looked at the surface of the subject. Hope this lesson sticks with him when other opportunities arise.
Plainwell gave good advice. One way to make friends is to be thoughtful of what one says. A âsnarkâ doesnât only affect the target but also those who observe it.
Ceeg22 Premium Member 10 months ago
Iâm impressed that sheâs back to work the day after!
DaBump Premium Member 10 months ago
So hard to resist that reflex.
jconnors3954 10 months ago
Mean is mean.
The Wolf In Your Midst 10 months ago
âIf you didnât win then why did you even tryâ is a far too prevalent mindset.
Yermo Adam 10 months ago
YaY! For Ms Plainwell. Excellent. 26.2 and in the top 10%. YoW! Way to go Ms P. !
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member 10 months ago
Without snarky comments, Iâd get to read GoComics in a lot less time each day.
Uncle Bob 10 months ago
Well played, Ms. P!!!
eced52 10 months ago
Amen, Miss Plainwell. Top ten percent in a marathon is very commendable indeed.
alexius23 10 months ago
During my teaching days I participated in the American Birkebeiner, a 31 mile cross country ski race. They gave out participation medals.
Richard S Russell Premium Member 10 months ago
I have nothing but awed respect for anyone who even attempts a marathon, iron man, birkie, triathlon, etc. The amount of dedication necessary just to try it is off the charts as far as Iâm concerned. Same goes for things like learning how to play a musical instrument well enuf to perform in public. Iâm content just to muddle along in comfortable mediocrity and admire the accomplished from afar.
puddleglum1066 10 months ago
I think Miss Plainwell blows it in the second panel, when she fails to point out that the medal is not given for participating, but for finishing. Big difference. Even if you are DLBF in a marathon, you have actually done something. âParticipationâ trophies are just for showing up, and itâs something the kid should understand.
B.comics.61 Premium Member 10 months ago
Not very authentic. The huge Bank of America logo should be visible.
EXCALABUR 10 months ago
Thereâs winners and there is non-winners, the most important things are, did you do your best and did you do it the right way. Some of these things nowadays where scores are not kept and everyone is a winner is not how things work in the real world.
socrates 10 months ago
Ms. Plainwell might have finished in the top 10%. But not necessarily, since everyone who finishes gets a finisherâs medal â not just those who finish in the top 10%. Even the runner who finishes last gets one. Thatâs why itâs called a âfinisherâs medal.â
Admittedly, her statement in the 2nd frame is somewhat ambiguous. I think she means that only about 10% of those who try to run the Boston Marathon (send in the necessary paperwork, etc.) are good enough (i.e., fast enough) to be allowed to run the course that day. Thatâs the âabout top 10 percentâ that Ms. Plainwell is in â and thatâs just one more reason why she is so impressive.