My dear girl,
Before I delve into serious topics and lose your attention to Instagram, several things:
1. You left the lights on in the bathroom.
2. Your shoes are in the middle of the hallway and I tripped over them twice already.
3. You left the lights on in the kitchen.
4. There is a collection of candy wrappers, dirty tissues, and remnants of popcorn in the living room.
5. You left the lights on in the den.
- "Your father and I really don’t appreciate being called stupid idiots when we happen to disagree with you." Image: iStock.
Please attend to the above before I am forced to walk into your room and attempt to confiscate your electronic devices. We both know this doesn’t usually end well.
Now on to more important issues.
When it comes to household chores, asking you to unload a dishwasher or walk the dog isn’t the same as making a Cinderella out of you. Plenty of people get out of bed before noon to take out their dogs so your claim that a noon wake up call qualifies as a violation of basic human rights is completely unsubstantiated. And while we are on the subject of rights, let me assure you that allowance is not a human right. Neither is it your indisputable right.
- "Your claim that a noon wake up call qualifies as a violation of basic human rights is completely unsubstantiated." Image: iStock.
Moving on. There is a reason they call it “private property.” You cannot appropriate your father’s telephone charger because you’ve lost yours. Similarly, you cannot grab our cell phones whenever you want to take a selfie. Perhaps next time when you fix your phone again you can keep it intact for longer than just two weeks.
This may come as a surprise but the rule of respecting other people’s property also extends to my wardrobe. Borrowing my bras, shoes, and clothes without prior permission is not okay. Your argument that you have nothing to wear doesn’t stand up to the realities of your closet, which is so cram-full of clothes that it can easily conceal a bazooka, a taxidermied bear, and a full set of Encyclopedia Britannica.