The Facts of Life
The free sharing of age old wisdom oft accrues psychological check, as mantra and adage delicately condition economic tumult and ethical expenditure.
But with myriad personality distinctions effervescently flourishing with multifaceted largesse, the germane likelihood of symbiotic sanction may prove disheartening or indeed quite fun.
A father shares his paternal advice only to find every moral qualm deconstructed.
His son winds up with a new car.
Who's to say what's to be done?
The Alien Corn
Theoretically in possession of everything one might hope to desire, yet longing to achieve the ultimate incomparable brilliant maddening incandescence.
Friends and family generally confused as to why the goal's so profoundly meaningful, considering how many other professions remain available, and he doesn't even have to work.
He's crushed by a virtuoso who didn't mean to hurt his feelings, and even though he's still quite talented, can't find the will to go on.
You can write Bazooka Joe comics or even Shakespearian sonnets, it makes no freakin' difference.
As long as you love what you do.
Beware destructive prejudice.
The Kite
Perhaps at times the parental bond is somewhat too tight, and the desire to be appreciated commensurately by others too unreasonable, so that when an imperious grown-up dispute arises, there's no applicable stratagem to discursively relay.
Sometimes incumbent smothering and a voluminous intent to orchestrate obsessively, may stifle the productivity you rely on, and leave a gaping void where you once harvested.
But in theory at times they say mental health professionals can attain results.
As in the case of this marriage in question.
With Mervyn Johns (Samuel Sunbury), Hermione Baddeley (Beatrice Sunbury), and George Cole (Herbert Sunbury).
The Colonel's Lady
Worst case for an austere admirer of poignant pomp and reservéd circumstance, the unexpected emergence of imaginative scandal ceremoniously upsetting his stilted life.
No doubt many would remain uncertain if such a surprise suddenly diversified, especially if a tried and true dependable routine had gregariously governed for ages past.
Yet the truth residing in fiction can fortuitously lead to regeneration.
With newfound amenities previously unexpected.
Bit of a shocker, still, no doubt.
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