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Universal Mother Love:

Universal Mother Love 1. An unloving mother is probably more likely to part with a child; the child may sense her lack of affection. 2. The child is not easy to love; in fretting for his mother he tends to reject others; if he does become attached to someone else, he is greedy and jealous in the relationship. 3. On his return to his mother, he may fail to recognize her, or reject her outright, or behave in a possessive and whining manner.

GOLDEN RULE. Christ enunciated what has been called the Golden Rule in the Sermon on the Mount: "So whatever you wish that men would do to you, do so to them." (Matthew 7:12; see also Luke 6:31). "Men" includes all men, even enemies (Matthew 5:44). The injunction is really another form of the Great Commandment, which makes universal mother love love of neighbor an extension of the love of God (Matthew 22:37-40).

See Also Father And Nine-year-old:

Carol did not say anything else. She rang her doorbell, took the five-year-old's hand and, when her mother pushed the buzzer, went inside. The other little girl rode away on her bicycle. Read the following incident, trying to understand what the child's be¬havior meant to him: Father and nine-year-old David were out in the backyard; father was working on the rosebushes. David, close by, picked up some of his father's tools.

Carol did not say anything else. She rang her doorbell, took the five-year-old's hand and, when her mother pushed the buzzer, went inside. The other little girl rode away on her bicycle. Read the following incident, trying to understand what the child's be¬havior meant to him: Father and nine-year-old David were out in the backyard; father was working on the rosebushes. David, close by, picked up some of his father's tools.


On The Other Hand See His Father Served:

So the genius refused to follow the beaten track of traditional education and took his artistic career into his own hands. At first his father served as the example, but as soon as Picasso had reached 13, he had already caught up with him. There was a decisive moment in his life and in the relationship between father and son, which was summarised by Picasso with the laconic words: "So he handed me his paint and his brush and never painted again." Picasso had really only obeyed his father's instructions and finished off the feet of some pigeons. However, these had turned out so true to life that father handed his tools over to his son, thus recognising that young Pablo had become a mature artist.

ROCHESTER, Nathaniel, American pio¬neer : b. Westmoreland County, Va., Feb. 21, 1752; d. Rochester, N. Y., May 17, 1831. His father died when he was four years old, and in 1763 his mother took him to North Carolina, where he grew up. In 1775 he became a member of the committee of safety of Orange County, and in that year and in 1776 he served as a delegate to the provincial conventions. He saw some serv¬ice in the militia, and in 1777 served as deputy commissary general of military and clothing stores. Beginning in 1778, Rochester established various manufacturing enterprises, first at Hills-boro and later at Hagerstown, Md. While in Maryland he served as a member of the legisla¬ture.

 

 

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