Taught A Lesson

Teaching her a lesson
Teaching her a lesson
She was moving closer in a suggestive manner, and it was obvious she was flirting. She asked, "What are you doing?" I replied, "Making you uncomfortable." It was clear that I was succeeding. I took a step back and asked, "What's happening? I just told you I hate you." "Yes, you did," she said, her fingers reaching out and grabbing my shirt, stopping me from backing away. "And that you want me, like I said when I arrived, even though you pretended you didn't hear me." "I'm confused," I responded. "It's simple," she replied, as she began unbuttoning my shirt. Her lips approached my ear and I could feel them on my skin as she whispered, "There are two things I want from a man. The first one is to be worshipped like a goddess." I shrugged the shirt off my shoulders and let her get to work on my belt as I went to work on her shorts. Pink panties. Bright pink. As pink as the thing inside them. "And the second one?" *** Read the filthy story between a teacher and his mischievous students as they attempt to entice him.
8.8
200 Chapters
A Lesson in Independence
A Lesson in Independence
I am Selene Moore, the fiancee of Callum Lowe, the Alpha of the Shadow Wolf pack. I am bound by a subservient love for six long years. Those werewolves back in the pack despise me, deeming me unfit to be the Luna of their pack. Callum, on the other hand, insists that I must smooth out my willful personality before proceeding with the bonding ceremony. Grandpa has been poisoned with wolfsbane and is dying, and the antidote he needs is one I can't afford. I approach Callum for help, but he dismisses me with accusations that I exploited the situation for attention. He therefore allows Natalie Anderson, his childhood friend, and her cronies to torment me. I repeatedly suffer their abuse in a desperate attempt to pay for Grandpa's treatment. In the end, Grandpa dies from poisoning, dying in despair. I become the docile woman Callum desired after Grandpa's death, and I cease my pursuit of him. I have also stopped loving him. Yet now, when the truth is laid bare, Callum seems to be filled with regret.
10 Chapters
A Son's Last Lesson
A Son's Last Lesson
My son is severely allergic to pollen, and because of his rare blood type, he must receive a specific desensitization injection at a bigger hospital in a different state. To make that happen, I deliberately booked the same flight as my wife just so our son could get help as soon as possible. But she insists on waiting for her late-arriving first love, refusing to let the plane take off. When I confront her, she says, "All passengers are equal. If the plane can wait for you, why can't it wait for him? Cam still needs to celebrate Josie's birthday. It's just ten minutes. Nothing will happen!" However, by the time we arrive at the hospital, the doctor tells us we missed the critical window for treatment. We were just ten minutes too late. Our son has now become a vegetable.
14 Chapters
Learning Her Lesson
Learning Her Lesson
"Babygirl?" I asked again confused. "I call my submissive my baby girl. That's a preference of mine. I like to be called Daddy." He said which instantly turned me on. What the hell is wrong with me? " *** Iris was so excited to leave her small town home in Ohio to attend college in California. She wanted to work for a law firm one day, and now she was well on her way. The smell of the ocean air was a shock to her senses when she pulled up to Long beach, but everything was so bright and beautiful. The trees were different, the grass, the flowers, the sun, everything was different. The men were different here. Professor Ryker Lorcane was different. He was intelligent but dark. Strong but steady. Everything the boys back home were not. *** I moaned loudly as he pulled out and pushed back in slowly each time going a little deeper. "You feel so good baby girl," he said as he slid back in. "Are you ready to be mine?" He said looking at me with those dark carnal eyes coming back into focus. I shook my head, yes, and he slammed into me hard. "Speak." He ordered. "Yes Daddy, I want to be yours," I said loudly this time.
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48 Chapters
Leaving After Learning My Lesson
Leaving After Learning My Lesson
My birthday present this year is a written contract titled 'Behavioral Reform Contract'. My fiance, who was the mafia head Matteo Giovanni, and my parents have already signed their names at the bottom. Together, they had me sent to the Behavioral Correction Center. … The windows are always shut, and the sunlight is filtered through the metal window bars. They drug, reprimand, and ostracize me to make me shove my feelings of aggrievement down. Even while I am being humiliated and punished, they teach me to force a smile and maintain a steady breath. It was all done in the name of "treating" me. A year passes, and I go from being a so-called "troublemaker" to their ideal version of me—quiet, elegant, and utterly perfect. Matteo beams at me and says, "You've finally become my perfect wife. We can finally marry." I match his smile, a gesture that they think means obedience from my part. However, it is not true. It is just me bidding my farewell before I leave for good. There's something I don't understand, however. They constantly found me lacking, so now that I am gone from their lives, why are they falling apart?
8 Chapters
The Man Who Taught Me Sin
The Man Who Taught Me Sin
Marrying the love of her life was a dream come true—until Kassia found out he couldn’t stand virgins. Terrified of ruining her marriage before it even began, she turned to a secret establishment that promised to teach her how to satisfy a man like a pro. But she didn’t expect to meet Derrick…her dangerously irresistible instructor who lit her body on fire with a single touch. What started as a lesson turned into an obsession. Now she’s married, pregnant… and the baby isn’t her husband’s. With guilt eating her alive and two powerful men fighting for her, Kassia must face the truth. One owns her heart, the other owns her vows… She's stuck between two powerful men, with a child caught in the middle. And it’s only a matter of time before it all explodes.
Not enough ratings
37 Chapters

What Is The Moral Lesson Of The Story Beauty And The Beast?

3 Answers2025-09-13 21:58:06

In 'Beauty and the Beast', one of the most compelling moral lessons revolves around the idea that true beauty lies within. This classic tale resonates deeply with me because it challenges societal standards of attractiveness and teaches us to look beyond the surface. Belle’s unwavering love for the Beast, despite his initially frightening appearance, serves as a powerful reminder that appearances can be deceptive. It’s about the growth of character and finding the goodness in others, regardless of how they may outwardly present themselves.

Another interesting point here is the theme of redemption. The Beast, initially portrayed as a monstrous figure, undergoes significant personal transformation throughout the story. His journey represents the potential for change when one opens their heart to love and compassion. It symbolizes hope—that we all have the capacity for growth. Additionally, the relationship between Belle and the Beast emphasizes the importance of understanding, communication, and patience in building connections. It's heartwarming to see how love can motivate us to be better versions of ourselves.

Overall, the story inspires me to reflect on how I treat others and encourages empathy in my interactions. It’s a tale that brilliantly showcases how love, compassion, and acceptance can lead to personal transformation, and that’s a lesson I carry with me every day. This narrative has the power to teach us that beneath every facade, there’s a story worth uncovering.

What Is The Moral Lesson In The Pardoner In Canterbury Tales?

4 Answers2025-09-05 16:35:36

I get a real charge from how sharp Chaucer is in 'The Canterbury Tales', and with the pardoner he hands us a brilliant two-for-one moral: greed corrupts, and rhetoric can be weaponized. The narrator confesses that the pardoner sells fake relics and begs for money while preaching against avarice — that contradiction is the whole point. It's a masterclass in hypocrisy; the tale he tells about three men who hunt 'Death' and find gold only to kill each other is a literal dramatization of the danger of loving wealth more than life.

But there's another layer I keep coming back to: it's also a warning about trust. The pardoner shows how charismatic speech and religious trappings can cloak vice. In modern terms, think of an influencer or a charismatic salesperson: the gift of persuasion without ethics is exactly what the pardoner practices. So the moral isn't just 'greed is bad' (though it is), it's also 'be wary of those who profit off preaching virtue.' That double punch is what makes the story so sticky for me; it still feels painfully current.

How Do Teachers Use Quotes August In Lesson Plans?

2 Answers2025-08-27 08:57:01

On hot August afternoons I find myself scribbling little lines on sticky notes for the first week of school — teachers love a good quote as a hook. I use quotes about August (the month), quotes from authors named August, and even quotes that use the word 'august' as an adjective to set tone or spark discussion. Practically, a quote can be a bell-ringer: project a single line on the board, ask students to free-write for five minutes about what it makes them picture, then share in pairs. For example, a line like 'August is like the Sunday of summer' (paraphrased) leads to sensory writing prompts, comparisons with 'Sunday' imagery, and quick vocabulary work.

When I plan units, I scatter quotes as small assessment forks. In literature, I’ll pull a sentence from a short story or from playwrights such as lines surrounding 'August: Osage County' and use that to model close reading — what does diction tell us about mood, what evidence supports an inference, which rhetorical devices are at play? In social studies, quotes tied to August events (like speeches, declarations, or historical reflections) become primary sources: students analyze context, bias, and purpose, then create a short commentary or a visual timeline. For younger grades I simplify: a bright, evocative quote can be illustrated, acted out, or rewritten in the student's own words to build comprehension and voice.

I also like to turn quotes into multi-modal projects. One year I had students curate a 'Month of Messages' board: each chose a quote about August or transition, paired it with an image, and composed a two-paragraph reflection explaining why it resonated and how it connected to a class theme. Tech-wise, Padlet, Google Slides, or Seesaw work great for collaborative quote walls and allow me to formatively assess understanding. Differentiation is key — for accelerated readers I assign comparative analysis between two quotes, for emergent readers I scaffold with sentence starters and vocabulary previews.

Beyond academics, quotes are gold for socio-emotional learning. A quiet, reflective quote about change or anticipation can open a discussion about feelings at the start of a school year. I’ll often close a class with an exit ticket: pick a quote from today, name one line that mattered, and write one action you’ll take tomorrow. Small rituals like these make lessons feel more human and keep students connected to the text — plus I get a lot of sticky notes on my desk by mid-September, which is a weirdly satisfying sign that the strategy worked.

Why Is Curious Of Benjamin Button Still Taught In Schools?

4 Answers2025-08-29 00:44:58

There's something quietly mischievous about reading 'The Curious Case of Benjamin Button' in a noisy café and watching strangers glance up at the page when I laugh. For me, it's a perfect classroom piece because it's short enough to be assigned easily, but dense enough to spark debate. Fitzgerald flips time on its head and forces you to think about aging, identity, and the social expectations tied to both. Students can trace how point of view, diction, and irony work together to produce emotional resonance without needing a 600-page commitment.

Beyond craft, the story is a cultural touchstone: it lets people connect themes of mortality and the American social order to a specific historical moment while remaining surprisingly timeless. I also like how it pairs well with a film screening or with a comparative assignment—students love dissecting differences between short fiction and cinematic adaptation. That mix of accessibility, thematic richness, and teachable technical elements is why I still see it on syllabi, and it always sparks new insights when I revisit it late at night.

Can Homestuck Breath Aspect Be Taught Or Transferred?

3 Answers2025-08-31 18:19:09

The concept of breathing aspects in 'Homestuck' is such a fascinating twist on the traditional elements we've come to expect in stories about powers and abilities. As a longtime fan of the comic, I've often pondered how these aspects, like Breath, Wind, or even Light, are integral to a character’s identity and abilities. When I think about the potential to teach or transfer the Breath aspect, it dives right into this idea of shared experiences and mentor figures. In those pivotal moments, characters interacting with each other could serve as guides, helping them harness the power of Breath through understanding its nuances and philosophies rather than just raw skill.

I imagine a scenario where someone, let's say a beginner who’s struggling with using their innate powers, could shadow a more experienced character—perhaps Karkat or another troll. They'd get insight into how this powerful Breath aspect is more about freedom and creativity than simply a magical ability. Beyond the mechanics, it’s like passing down wisdom, something really profound. So, would this mean that those with Breath could take someone under their wing, share their knowledge, and kind of mentor them into recognizing their own potential? The idea that the Breath aspect isn’t just inherent but can be cultivated with guidance resonates deeply, making the world of 'Homestuck' even richer!

Considering how this ties into various archetypes present in other stories, it's not unheard of—like in 'Avatar: The Last Airbender' with the Avatar’s ability to teach. It makes you think, what is the limit of these powers when they're not just individual but collective? It's honestly exciting to think that growth can be collaborative in a universe like this, adding layers to the already intricate and emotionally charged connections between characters.

Why Are Quotes Julius Caesar Still Taught In Literature Classes?

3 Answers2025-08-27 12:33:31

There’s something almost addictive about a sentence that can survive centuries, and that’s why lines from 'Julius Caesar' keep showing up in classrooms. When I first started reading it in a cramped uni seminar, I was struck by how few words could carry so much weight — 'Et tu, Brute?' lands like a punch not only because of betrayal, but because Shakespeare compresses history, character, and emotion into three syllables.

Beyond the visceral moments, teachers use those quotes as shortcuts into bigger lessons: rhetoric, persuasion, and civic responsibility. I still picture a teacher pausing after 'Friends, Romans, countrymen...' and asking us to dissect the rhetorical devices, the crowd manipulation, the difference between public speech and private motives. It’s not just literature for literature’s sake; it’s practice in spotting how language shapes thought — useful whether you’re reading political speeches, crafting an essay, or just arguing with a roommate about Netflix picks.

On a lighter note, those lines are everywhere — mugs, t-shirts, memes — which helps them stick. But the real reason they persist is adaptability. Teachers can use them to teach meter and metaphor one day, civic ethics the next, or even performance skills when someone reads the funeral oration aloud. For me, the best moments were always when a quiet student suddenly owned the stage and made the crowd line matter again. It’s theatrical, timeless, and oddly practical, which is why 'Julius Caesar' quotes keep getting taught.

What Is The Moral Lesson Of The Ogress And The Orphans?

3 Answers2025-11-13 23:27:48

The Ogress and the Orphans' is such a heartwarming yet profound story that left me thinking for days. At its core, it’s about the power of community and how kindness can dismantle even the most entrenched greed. The ogress, initially feared, reveals layers of vulnerability, while the orphans embody resilience. What struck me most was how the townspeople’s collective action—rooted in empathy—transforms their world. It’s not just about good vs. evil; it’s about how fear can blind us to others’ suffering, and how small acts of courage (like the orphans’ persistence) can ripple into big change. The way Stone weaves folklore with modern themes of solidarity makes it timeless.

Another layer I adore is the critique of selfishness. The mayor’s hoarding mirrors real-world greed, but the orphans’ selflessness—sharing despite having little—flips the script. It’s a reminder that scarcity is often manufactured, and generosity is revolutionary. The scene where the ogress’s heart ‘melts’ isn’t just magical realism; it’s a metaphor for how compassion can thaw even the coldest barriers. This book made me ugly-cry—not just because it’s sad, but because it insists that hope isn’t naive. It’s a call to nurture community, especially in dark times.

What Is Classic Books Often Taught In Schools?

3 Answers2025-07-07 13:38:24

I remember when I was in school, we had to read 'To Kill a Mockingbird' by Harper Lee, and it completely changed how I saw the world. The story of Scout and her father, Atticus, taught me so much about justice and empathy. Another one was 'The Great Gatsby' by F. Scott Fitzgerald, which showed me the glamour and tragedy of the American Dream. 'Lord of the Flies' by William Golding was also a big one, making me think about human nature and society. These books stuck with me because they weren't just stories; they made me question things and see life differently. Classics like 'Romeo and Juliet' and 'Of Mice and Men' were also part of the curriculum, and they really helped me understand love, friendship, and sacrifice in ways I hadn't before.

What Is The Main Lesson In Napoleon Hill Book Law Of Success?

5 Answers2025-07-28 21:37:11

As someone who's deeply immersed in self-improvement literature, 'Law of Success' by Napoleon Hill feels like a blueprint for building a meaningful life. The core lesson revolves around the idea that success isn't accidental—it's a science with definable principles. Hill emphasizes the 'Master Mind' principle, where collaboration with like-minded individuals multiplies your potential. The book also stresses the power of definite purpose; without a clear goal, energy scatters.

Another pivotal lesson is overcoming adversity through persistence. Hill's research on figures like Henry Ford shows how failure often precedes success. The chapter on applied faith resonates with me—visualizing success so vividly that it materializes. What makes this book timeless is its practical approach to intangible concepts like enthusiasm and self-discipline, framing them as skills rather than traits. It's not just about wealth but holistic achievement.

What Is The Moral Lesson Of The Miller'S Tale In The Canterbury Tales?

3 Answers2025-07-08 11:30:34

The Miller's Tale in 'The Canterbury Tales' is a wild ride of deception and absurdity, but beneath the chaos, it teaches a sharp lesson about the consequences of vanity and foolishness. The carpenter, John, is duped because of his blind jealousy and lack of critical thinking, while Nicholas and Alison's scheming leads to their own humiliation. The tale mocks human flaws—gullibility, lust, and pride—showing how they can spiral into disaster. It's a medieval reminder that not everyone gets what they deserve, but arrogance often sets you up for a fall. The tale’s humor makes the lesson stick: don’t be so full of yourself, or you might end up with a hot poker where you least expect it.

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