English, asked by vlaashyagmailcom, 1 month ago

essay about listening to parent word in your own words100-150 words​

Answers

Answered by anjalirehan04
1

Last week, I wrote an open letter to parents of kids with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Now I want to offer some words of advice to those kids.

Your parents love you and will sacrifice a lot for your well-being. That means you have an even greater responsibility as a child with Duchenne to listen to your parents, respect them, be disciplined, be grateful for their dedication and hard work, and love them back.

I don’t have the same perspective as a parent, but I do have the perspective of being a son. I hope that my successes and failures in the occupation of “child” can help you get along better with your parents and lead to better health outcomes.

When you get older and become more aware of your situation and surroundings, you will probably wonder, “Why am I this way?” Up until now, you’ve known you were different, just not how different. As the disease progresses, you’ll realize you will never be like your friends. You won’t be able to swim as fast, jump as far, or even walk as well as them.

Life can feel unfair, trust me. However, the worst thing you can do is blame anyone, because no one really is to blame. It can feel easy to take out all that pent-up anger on your parents. But before you do that, take a step back and realize how much they’ve already done for you. That’s why respect is important.

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Answered by DakshRaj1234
2

Answer:

Last week, I wrote an open letter to parents of kids with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Now I want to offer some words of advice to those kids.

Your parents love you and will sacrifice a lot for your well-being. That means you have an even greater responsibility as a child with Duchenne to listen to your parents, respect them, be disciplined, be grateful for their dedication and hard work, and love them back.

I don't have the same perspective as a parent, but I do have the perspective of being a son. I hope that my successes and failures in the occupation of "child" can help you get along better with your parents and lead to better health outcomes.

When you get older and become more aware of your situation and surroundings, you will probably wonder, "Why am I this way?" Up until now, you've known you were different, just not how different. As the disease progresses, you'll realize you will never be like your friends. You won't be able to swim as fast, jump as far, or even walk as well as them.

Life can feel unfair, trust me. However, the worst thing you can do is blame anyone, because no one really is to blame. It can feel easy to take out all that pent-up anger on your parents. But before you do that, take a step back and realize how much they've already done for you. That's why respect is important.

please mark me brain mark list

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