Treatment Abuse, Behavior Modification, Thought Reform > Hyde Schools

Requesting Parents' Assessment of Hyde School

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Anonymous:

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--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---How did you find out about this web site?
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I stumbled across this site last month when I Googled an acquaintance whose name appears in association with it. It wasn't something that I sought out, but something that I sort of met by accident on the path. I left Hyde thirty years ago with a forward look and not with a backward look. College, graduate schools, marriage, immigration, career, family: all these haven't left me much time to mull over the Hyde effect, whether good or ill. From what little I've gathered, it seems there's an inverse ratio between success at Hyde and success in the real world. That's good news for a guy like me who took Hyde with a grain of salt and was branded a failure. I might have carried my burden of failure on into adulthood, and even gone back for a late-life diploma, like tin man, scarecrow, and cowardly lion. Well, it's wonderful to discover Hyde's dissident community! I had no idea I was in such good company!
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Am curious, did you contact this acquaintence?  If so, was he/she aware of this board?
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No.
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Name of acquaintence?

Anonymous:

--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---How did you find out about this web site?
--- End quote ---

I stumbled across this site last month when I Googled an acquaintance whose name appears in association with it. It wasn't something that I sought out, but something that I sort of met by accident on the path. I left Hyde thirty years ago with a forward look and not with a backward look. College, graduate schools, marriage, immigration, career, family: all these haven't left me much time to mull over the Hyde effect, whether good or ill. From what little I've gathered, it seems there's an inverse ratio between success at Hyde and success in the real world. That's good news for a guy like me who took Hyde with a grain of salt and was branded a failure. I might have carried my burden of failure on into adulthood, and even gone back for a late-life diploma, like tin man, scarecrow, and cowardly lion. Well, it's wonderful to discover Hyde's dissident community! I had no idea I was in such good company!
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What was that pop song from about 30 years ago?  "Oz never gave nothing to the tinman that he didn't all ready have."  Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain.  It is just Joe.  I have been thru the desert on a horse with no name since then, so I can't remember my name.
BTW  I just watched Doug Pray's "Hype" on DVD.  It is really good.  

Emil Nightrate[/quote]

Good to hear from you again, Emil. I remember listening to America late night with Lynch on our transistor.

Mike

Anonymous:

--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---How did you find out about this web site?
--- End quote ---

I stumbled across this site last month when I Googled an acquaintance whose name appears in association with it. It wasn't something that I sought out, but something that I sort of met by accident on the path. I left Hyde thirty years ago with a forward look and not with a backward look. College, graduate schools, marriage, immigration, career, family: all these haven't left me much time to mull over the Hyde effect, whether good or ill. From what little I've gathered, it seems there's an inverse ratio between success at Hyde and success in the real world. That's good news for a guy like me who took Hyde with a grain of salt and was branded a failure. I might have carried my burden of failure on into adulthood, and even gone back for a late-life diploma, like tin man, scarecrow, and cowardly lion. Well, it's wonderful to discover Hyde's dissident community! I had no idea I was in such good company!
--- End quote ---

Am curious, did you contact this acquaintence?  If so, was he/she aware of this board?
--- End quote ---

No.
--- End quote ---
Name of acquaintence?
--- End quote ---


Ed Legg.

Anonymous:

--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---How did you find out about this web site?
--- End quote ---

I stumbled across this site last month when I Googled an acquaintance whose name appears in association with it. It wasn't something that I sought out, but something that I sort of met by accident on the path. I left Hyde thirty years ago with a forward look and not with a backward look. College, graduate schools, marriage, immigration, career, family: all these haven't left me much time to mull over the Hyde effect, whether good or ill. From what little I've gathered, it seems there's an inverse ratio between success at Hyde and success in the real world. That's good news for a guy like me who took Hyde with a grain of salt and was branded a failure. I might have carried my burden of failure on into adulthood, and even gone back for a late-life diploma, like tin man, scarecrow, and cowardly lion. Well, it's wonderful to discover Hyde's dissident community! I had no idea I was in such good company!
--- End quote ---

Am curious, did you contact this acquaintence?  If so, was he/she aware of this board?
--- End quote ---

No.
--- End quote ---
Name of acquaintence?
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Ed Legg.
--- End quote ---

 
 Oh Mr Ed "I love the sound of my own voice. You need to be committed to changing the world" Legg?  He is revolutionizing American Society as the Assistant Dean of Dribble Glass Studies at some podunk commuter school.  Is that too harsh?  Sorry.

Emil

Anonymous:

--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---
--- Quote from: ""Guest"" ---How did you find out about this web site?
--- End quote ---

I stumbled across this site last month when I Googled an acquaintance whose name appears in association with it. It wasn't something that I sought out, but something that I sort of met by accident on the path. I left Hyde thirty years ago with a forward look and not with a backward look. College, graduate schools, marriage, immigration, career, family: all these haven't left me much time to mull over the Hyde effect, whether good or ill. From what little I've gathered, it seems there's an inverse ratio between success at Hyde and success in the real world. That's good news for a guy like me who took Hyde with a grain of salt and was branded a failure. I might have carried my burden of failure on into adulthood, and even gone back for a late-life diploma, like tin man, scarecrow, and cowardly lion. Well, it's wonderful to discover Hyde's dissident community! I had no idea I was in such good company!
--- End quote ---

Am curious, did you contact this acquaintence?  If so, was he/she aware of this board?
--- End quote ---

No.
--- End quote ---
Name of acquaintence?
--- End quote ---

Ed Legg.
--- End quote ---
 
 Oh Mr Ed "I love the sound of my own voice. I want you to be committed to changing the world" Legg?  He is revolutionizing American Society as the Assistant Dean of Dribble Glass Studies at some podunk commuter school.  Is that too harsh?  Sorry.

Emil
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I have his coordinates, Emil. I don't care about his job. That's not why I haven't contacted him.

Mike

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