I was a young girl the first time I learned about the concept of paying it forward.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I feel that you always pay when you are a child.
'Pay it forward' has become a hackneyed concept, but I truly believe in it, and it gives me huge satisfaction to be able to help writers in a measurable way.
When I turned 16, my dad made me sign a contract - he made us sign contracts for everything - that if I hit my car, I would be responsible for paying for it. I was in bumper-to-bumper traffic, and I tapped someone. It was so not a big deal, but I had to pay for it.
I've been in a situation where I was after the money.
When I was born I owed twelve dollars.
I learned at that young age that sometimes a really big chance pays off.
I think I've been around for a while. But I still have to pay my dues.
I owe it to my children to secure their future.
Grownups, as a rule, should always be ready to pay for their own meals - or else ready to graciously accept their date's insistence on paying. The point is, one doesn't sit there batting one's eyelashes, fully expecting someone else to claim the bill.
Sometimes I pay for it, With the way I walk now, the things I did to my body wasn't supposed to be done. At 48 years old, it is saying, 'Hey, Earl, remember what you did to me?'.
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