January 12, 2005

  • unexpurgated remarks left by Ms. 7 on notepad in my office while I was phoning a client.


Comments (19)

  • This may or may not be good for business.

  • spy stuff? at least she's not into beauty products yet.

  • Oh! The things I could do if I could get away from school (work).

  • bahaha.  my two play spies also; they lurk along the walls and whisper loudly to one another as i pass, "there she is.  be quiet so she won't see us." 

    i'll bet mine kick yours's asses on the CIA entrance exams, yo.

  • Ain't it the truth.

    We also cannot get away from real life, which awaits us when we have been hiding our heads in the warm, white sands of small carribean nations for too long. People always see us...and this is why invisibility would be my superpower of choice.

    Spy was my favorite "game"...and it should come as no surprise that I underlined all the information about Mata Hari in my Britannicas.

  • Did she eat the top secret note when she was done?

  •  you must be 7's "M" eh?
    I had no idea "M" stood for mom!
    (think: Bond, James Bond... "007" )

    ps Thank you! for the email

  • May or may not be good for business, indeed!  And MyKi's "M" puts a positive spin on it I hadn't considered.

    Personally, I'm fascinated by the justaposition of the completedly amoral (sneaking and stealing) and the staid and rule-bound (can't get away from school).  And if I weren't a parent, I'd be rolling on the floor:  yeah, I always knew there was something irritating about school.  And that's it!  Kept me from sneaking and stealing, all this time.  Sheesh.

  • Hah! now I know! It's spies that come and steal socks and pens!

    (Save that one for the scrapbook...)

  • Wait a minute, that daughter of yours is no thief!
    She wants to sneak in and "steel" things! You know, reinforce them...with steel girders and whatnot! In California, we call it retrofitting...who knows, you may have a future civil engineer living under your roof.

  • Yeah, I've been a little worried about sneek-and-steel, but now that you mention it:  excellent.  (I was happy about 'house' and 'because', though....)

  • that's classic and one for the scrap-book for sure.............great post!

    lora

  • I am a parent but, I'm not her parent so, I am ROFLMAO.

    I thought I was hot shit when I was a senior and skipped out on the French final to get drunk on a quart of beer.  Your offspring, at the mere age of 7, is contemplating the dilema of breaking the bonds of servitude in order to enter into the exciting life of espionage and burglary.  How cool is that?

  • LOL - this is wonderful.  Gotta love the little sneeks  :grin:

  • Ah, foiled again! I knew it would be the getting away from school part that would be our undoing! :)   Precious stuff, this. Save it away.

  • wow.  Amazing to go inside the mind of a seven year old.  My niece who is eight has been asking her mother lately questions like "If God made the world, who made God?"  She really isn't related to me.  But her mother (my best friend) SWEARS that somehow she really is from my bloodline somehow.

  • I was a spy kid too. We all played serious spy games. Growing up with spy hero's like James Bond and Maxwell Smart. I always loved the gadgets. I was obsessed with spy novels, games and movies. I think if I had a dream of a different life for me - I would have been a georgus spy  woman. I love Ms 7's imagination.

  • Your daughter is smarter than I was at her age. And I thought I was pretty smart.

  • Hilarious. and I'm quite amused by Steve's comment.

    Thinking of you, too.

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