For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston for January 28, 2014

  1. Missing large
    isleofjava  about 10 years ago

    There’s a bit difference between having a Ph.D. in psychology (or thinking you do) and being a real life mom (or dad). It has nothing to do with old age onset, but plain frustration at the sheer inconsideration that abounds in families.

     •  Reply
  2. 20210517 082929
    flagmichael  about 10 years ago

    Homer Simpson: “Rhetorical, eh?”

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    masnadies  about 10 years ago

    I know that I’m not supposed to ask “why” questions, like “Why is there a coat on the floor?”, but they just come out when you’re tired and doing 20 things at once. It’s hard to get over a lifetime of training, because a few months ago, you learned that something you’ve used your whole life with your adult acquaintances, doesn’t work with kids.

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large
    masnadies  about 10 years ago

    I know that I’m not supposed to ask “why” questions, like “Why is there a coat on the floor?”, but they just come out when you’re tired and doing 20 things at once. It’s hard to get over a lifetime of training, because a few months ago, you learned that something you’ve used your whole life with your adult acquaintances, doesn’t work with kids.

     •  Reply
  5. Image000000
    MIHorn Premium Member about 10 years ago

    C’mon — the kid is old enough to know that when his attention is drawn to the boots (or anything else) that’s just thrown down instead of being where it should be, that he’s being told to put it where it belongs. He’s also old enough (and smart-aleck enough) to want to pull Mom’s chain!

     •  Reply
  6. Cathyfacepalm
    lightenup Premium Member about 10 years ago

    He’s old enough to know better, but he won’t change until he’s older and on his own.

     •  Reply
  7. Dck
    oldmachead Premium Member about 10 years ago

    @lightenup … and even then there’s no guarantee! :)

    “he won’t change until he’s older and on his own.”

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    stephensalaun  about 10 years ago

    Asking “Whose filthy, wet, snowy boots were left on the hall floor?” was not a request for information, it was meant to provoke a confession by the culprit. Much like God asked “Where art thou?” in the Garden after Adam & Eve had sinned. God knew good & well where Adam was, but He wanted him to own up to his sin. Once a person confesses. “Yeah, I am the one who did wrong,” he or she is well on their way to being responsible enough not to do it again.

     •  Reply
  9. Lounge a bof
    sbchamp  about 10 years ago

    Hi, Mom!

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    Quiet One  about 10 years ago

    Wow! Thought I’d try reading the comments on this strip again. You guys do realize it’s just a comic, right? I read it, saw it as a commentary on typical parent/kid interactions, and smiled at the memories it brought up of my son as he was growing into adulthood.

     •  Reply
  11. Silverknights
    JanLC  about 10 years ago

    Susan, it is absolutely amazing how people who have never had kids always seem to have the perfect solution to any given situation. Newspapers on the hall floor are slippery and kids are clumsy, a perfect combination for disaster.

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    Argy.Bargy2  about 10 years ago

    -SIGH…..-If Elly would have just spread a newspaper …-Newspapers have this problem. They get saturated, and when they do, the ink in the newspaper stains whatever the newspaper is spread upon. This creates more, not less work for whoever was trying to keep dirty water from being tracked all over their house.- It’s why most of our parents who live (or formerly lived) in snow country and didn’t have ‘mud rooms’ for people to leave wet boots in didn’t bother with newspapers, and tried to train us kids at an early age to fetch some paper towels to wipe boots down with, instead of just dumping them in front of the door….

     •  Reply
  13. 08 01 15 11 20 pm
    krys723  about 10 years ago

    Actually newspapers are horrible in the winter time. My Mom always told my siblings and I to wipe your feet on the rugs at the front and back doors and THEN leave your shoes at the door so they can dry properly.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    thesnowleopard Premium Member about 10 years ago

    Of course he’s old enough to know better. If he’s old enough to use sarcasm, he’s old enough to know better—and also find out why you use caution when employing sarcasm. Not to mention, they have to learn the “why” sometime, anyway.

     •  Reply
  15. 1682106 inline inline 2 mel brooks master
    Can't Sleep  about 10 years ago

    Do you read this strip just to tell us how Elly should behave?And – I do hate to be the one to point this out to you – but it’s a comic strip, not a documentary.Jeeze!

     •  Reply
  16. Missing large
    bjnoll  about 10 years ago

    when I was growing up in snowy upstate NY my mom had boot trays by the door and in really wet and messy situations we threw our boots and snowsuits in the bathtub.Problem solved.

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    bjnoll  about 10 years ago

    PS…there were 8 of us. Mom had to “housebreak” us !

     •  Reply
  18. Shetland sheepdog
    ellisaana Premium Member about 10 years ago

    We have one of those, too. We also have a ‘water hog’ doormat inside the kitchen door. I think a better question for Elly to ask would have been: “Michael, why did you leave your wet, snowy boots on the floor when you know you shouldn’t?” I always found ‘simple and to the point’ worked better with kids.

     •  Reply
  19. Missing large
    westny77  about 10 years ago

    Point well taken. This is why children run away from home.

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    USN1977  about 10 years ago

    Elly should know better that Michael is not going to respond to mind games, especially after she failed to trick him into not saying “I quit” to Phil’s music lessons. An easier way would simply be “Michael, get your boots out of here! Do not leave them out if they are dirty.” Simple and to the point. If Michael actually asked “How did you know they are my boots?” Elly could have said “Well, they cannot be Elizabeth’s, they are too big, and they cannot be your father’s they are too small. Thus, by process of elimination, you’re it!”

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From For Better or For Worse