Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Deep Sadness?
The parents of a British schoolboy who was on the Air France plane that crashed in the Atlantic off Brazil have spoken of their "deep sadness" at the loss.
Deep sadness is what you feel when you hear of someone you knew dying - surely when your son is killed you would be absolutely devastated - but then he was shipped off to boarding school in England while the parents were in Rio.
Deep sadness is what you feel when you hear of someone you knew dying - surely when your son is killed you would be absolutely devastated - but then he was shipped off to boarding school in England while the parents were in Rio.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by lankeela. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Echo the words of NoMercy + Sqad. Lankeela - if someone says they are deeply saddened they may actually mean they are very distressed by the trauma. There is nothing wrong with sending one's child off to boarding school either. My husband went to boarding school as a boy yet he was deeply loved by his parents. You cannot always tell what grief someone is experiencing by just their words alone either. Some people are not expressive with words whether it is great sadnesses or great joys yet they can stil be experiencing great emotions. Important to look at whole picture. Calling people on Chatterbank Morons is not particularly polite either- how to win friends and influence people. Yet saying this have a knack at times for putting foot in it by being too honest especially with the intellectual snobs on here. We are all equals no matter what our intelligence, status in society, private or public school education, creed, colour or how expressive we happen to be or not be with words, rich or poor- We all have the right to be treated with equal respect, kindness, tolerance + goodness. Sometimes not all is what it seems, too- Judging a book by its cover. Free country where we are all entitled to our own viewpoints. Loquacious Bea :-)