Sometimes I don’t know how much of it is childlike free association, how much is gripping psychological thriller, and how much is “Kids are *much* sharper than we give them credit for.” (I sometimes use “a meeting” as excuse to shut door to decrease noise and help concentrate.)
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Meeting topic was discussing work priorities: Lillian: “We need to make money!” Me: “Well, while that is certainly also a goal, work is also about helping people.” Lillian: “You help people by making them money!” Me: “Lots of ways to do that.” Lillian: “But *you* do money!”
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Me: “... Well yes, that is something I do. For example, I help people with businesses...” Lillian: “And I know it’s computer money! Not paper money! Printer only prints boring papers!” Boring printer goes sobbbbbb.
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Classic New Yorker piece about the phenomenon of imaginary friends with office meetings https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2002/09/30/bumping-into-mr-ravioli …pic.twitter.com/KQ6LGrj6Bm
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Lillian is clearly awesome.
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1000000% agreed.
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She's not supposed to know yet!
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Can me and my imaginary friends please join this meeting?
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Haha, if it helps, we’re all bots here, figments from a scriptkiddie imagination
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wow, my 6 and 7 years is not even as articulate as yours :))
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