write a letter to your mother about your first day in school with 25 to 50 words
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place,
date.
dear mom,
I am fine here .Hope you are fine. I am very happy about my school .its very interesting. I thought that it won't be nice .But it's nice. l am very interested to go to the school
date.
dear mom,
I am fine here .Hope you are fine. I am very happy about my school .its very interesting. I thought that it won't be nice .But it's nice. l am very interested to go to the school
Answered by
2
here's your answer
Dear Mom and Dad,
Congratulations! The day has arrived! You did it! I’m off to college!
At graduation, I received all of these words of congratulations, but I’d like to congratulate you. You made it! Yes, I’m the one who earned the grades, spent hours at after school activities, and submitted the college applications, but I couldn’t have done it without your help. You taught me the value of hard work, the difference between right and wrong, and the power of kindness. And for that I am grateful.
But now comes the hard part… moving out for the first time, trusting me to make the right choices, and helping me learn from those choices even when I don’t always make the right ones.
Now I’ll always be your kid, but the thing is, I’m not a kid. I’m an adult. Or at least I’m trying to figure out how to be one. And while it will be difficult for both of us, you have to let me figure things out even if that means I stumble a bit. When you say, “Don’t forget to pack your jacket,” I hear, “I don’t trust you to pack for yourself.” What you’re actually saying is, “I checked the weather and I don’t want you to be cold.” When you say, “Be careful” every time I leave the house, I hear, “I have irrational fears about your safety.” What you’re actually saying is, “I’m your mom and I worry about you. And that doesn’t stop just because you’re 18.” When you do things for me that I need to figure out how to do for myself, I hear, “I don’t trust you to do this yourself.” What you’re actually saying is, “I’m just trying to help.” Even though it’s not always easy, I guess we both could do better at saying we mean and really listening to each other.
So the time has come. You taught me to fly and I’m ready to leave the nest. But remember, even though I’m moving to my own nest soon, your nest will always be home.
Love,
school student
you can take some point from it and make your own letter
plzzzz...
mark it as a brainlist
Dear Mom and Dad,
Congratulations! The day has arrived! You did it! I’m off to college!
At graduation, I received all of these words of congratulations, but I’d like to congratulate you. You made it! Yes, I’m the one who earned the grades, spent hours at after school activities, and submitted the college applications, but I couldn’t have done it without your help. You taught me the value of hard work, the difference between right and wrong, and the power of kindness. And for that I am grateful.
But now comes the hard part… moving out for the first time, trusting me to make the right choices, and helping me learn from those choices even when I don’t always make the right ones.
Now I’ll always be your kid, but the thing is, I’m not a kid. I’m an adult. Or at least I’m trying to figure out how to be one. And while it will be difficult for both of us, you have to let me figure things out even if that means I stumble a bit. When you say, “Don’t forget to pack your jacket,” I hear, “I don’t trust you to pack for yourself.” What you’re actually saying is, “I checked the weather and I don’t want you to be cold.” When you say, “Be careful” every time I leave the house, I hear, “I have irrational fears about your safety.” What you’re actually saying is, “I’m your mom and I worry about you. And that doesn’t stop just because you’re 18.” When you do things for me that I need to figure out how to do for myself, I hear, “I don’t trust you to do this yourself.” What you’re actually saying is, “I’m just trying to help.” Even though it’s not always easy, I guess we both could do better at saying we mean and really listening to each other.
So the time has come. You taught me to fly and I’m ready to leave the nest. But remember, even though I’m moving to my own nest soon, your nest will always be home.
Love,
school student
you can take some point from it and make your own letter
plzzzz...
mark it as a brainlist
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