Change a single letter and change the word game

panicking-at-the-disco-forever:

softnsquishable:

frankiegeemikeyray:

geetrick:

geetrickleddownmychin:

littlebithomicidal:

rainbow-beaniegirl:

moist-astronaut:

fabulouskilljoyfunghoul:

mtheghost:

rhys-yells:

pan-kaminari:

flower-nerd-nerd:

i-sleep-to-avoid-my-problems:

pumakittycat:

connyow-and-jawed:

softmushie:

madicanhandleit:

mimiiqyu:

n-oy-a:

theinsanelycooljordanmichael:

majinie:

maddstarr:

assbutt2402:

cassstopgivingmeincorrectquotes:

themigitqueen:

fluentreferencespeaker:

demonicsymphony:

azriona:

toooldforthissh–stuff:

cloakstone69:

hugealienpie:

ailuromatron:

computerkat:

carmillapie:

prettilyphil:

infinitylester:

twentyoneparades-to-panic-at:

hetaliagurl5:

blugh-blu:

broadwaytheanimatedseries:

hamilspntrash:

lilbeanblr:

mydogsaresofuckingstupid:

silly-aesthetic-me:

fandomsandanythingelse:

virgils-jacket:

heyimslightlyobsessed:

princeyssash:

theartsyskeleton:

tinymugs:

actual-dorito-steve-rogers:

bluedays13:

that1nonymous:

patotaes01:

kiwikagari:

boomsakebam:

genderless-scientist:

fanfictionsandfood:

chris-the-mighty:

identityconstellations:

foobar-the-great:

youvegotthatonering:

win-build-equip:

child-of-tanavast:

a-singing-dragonfly:

i-got-that-bible-swag:

darkhairedgirlfromgallifrey:

when-we-get-over-yonder:

destyni-is-me:

arsenicgodhead:

shaelthefangirl:

ghost-buster-john:

ninfiaholic:

terezi:

ukuleleshitpost:

disc-horsey:

lifefilledwithstories:

sneakysnorlax:

atlas-prime:

kandrakelsier:

fuckyeahdiomedes:

lightspun:

answersfromvanaheim:

j4ckwynand:

akedhi:

texasflutes:

clarawebbwillcutoffyourhead:

trueconfessionsofacurvygirl:

wasmnowf:

seanarain:

popppy–girl:

dharuadhmacha:

chiami-jishin:

hiddenpleasures100:

chiami-jishin:

inanna76:

superdupersafeforwork:

hiddenpleasures100:

missmirim:

hiddenpleasures100:

inanna76:

superdupersafeforwork:

I want to play a game with you all.

You have to make a new word by changing only one letter of the last word.

Dirt

Dire

Dare

Bare

Bard

Card

Care

Mare

Male

Made

Mode

Code

Cone

Core

Cord

Lord

Lore

Lyre

Pyre

Pare

part

Fart

farm

Fare

Fore

Sore

Sort

Soft

Sift

silt!

silk

Milk

Mill

Mull

Mule

Male

Rale

Rule

Rile

Vile

Tile

Time

Lime

Like

Hike

Bike

Bake

Cake

Lake

Like

Bike

Bile

File

Tile

Tilt

Wilt

Lilt

Kilt

Kill

Bill

Jill

Dill

Doll

Dole

pole

Hole

sole

sold

cold

mold

meld

mend

fend

send

Tend

Tent

Sent

Rent

Bent

Best

Beat

belt

Bell

well

weld

held

help

hell

heal

Peal

Teal

Tear

Wear

Weak

Week

Meek

Reek

Reel

Heel

Heal

Peal

Pear

Peer

Beer

bitch-i-migth-be:

Mom: *Opening door, once upon a blue moon, to check in on me at 2 a.m. to verify the aliens had not taken me yet.*

Me, after a mad scramble to hide the light of my phone:

image

*whispered thinking* Yes, I am currently endeavoring on the sleep, there is nothing going on here. You may retreat to your chambers master.

momo-de-avis:

aloneindarknes7:

calystarose:

Because treating people fairly often means treating them differently.

This is something that I teach my students during the first week of school and they understand it. Eight year olds can understand this and all it costs is a box of band-aids.

I have each students pretend they got hurt and need a band-aid. Children love band-aids. I ask the first one where they are hurt. If he says his finger, I put the band-aid on his finger. Then I ask the second one where they are hurt. No matter what that child says, I put the band-aid on their finger exactly like the first child. I keep doing that through the whole class. No matter where they say their pretend injury is, I do the same thing I did with the first one.

After they all have band-aids in the same spot, I ask if that actually helped any of them other than the first child. I say, “Well, I helped all of you the same! You all have one band-aid!” And they’ll try to get me to understand that they were hurt somewhere else. I act like I’m just now understanding it. Then I explain, “There might be moments this year where some of you get different things because you need them differently, just like you needed a band-aid in a different spot.” 

If at any time any of my students ask why one student has a different assignment, or gets taken out of the class for a subject, or gets another teacher to come in and help them throughout the year, I remind my students of the band-aids they got at the start of the school year and they stop complaining. That’s why eight year olds can understand equity. 

I remember reading somewhere once “we should be speaking of equity instead of equality” and that is a principle that applies here me thinks