I Would Like to See You Again is the 57th album by American country singer Johnny Cash, released on Columbia Records in 1978. The title track peaked at #12 on the singles chart, while "There Ain't No Good Chain Gang" reached #2; the album itself peaked at #23. The album features a pair of duets with Waylon Jennings, one of which was the "There Ain't No Good Chain Gang" single; it was one of Cash's first collaborations with Jennings, and the two recorded songs together throughout the 1980s, including a separate album entitled Heroes. Cash and Jennings would also work together as The Highwaymen with Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson.

The album, released in 1976, turned out, according to Kenny Rogers himself, "pretty much enevenful", yet, as C. Eric Banister put it in his book Johnny Cash FAQ: All That's Left to Know About the Man in Black, "it included several decent songs, one of which was 'I Would Like to See You Again'"[2] that would later be covered by Johnny Cash.


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@Willene1 I have just dealt with this this month - that 'No' button doesn't prevent them from booking with you again: I have a problematic guest who continued to be able to book instantly, I will never host him again and was initially told that same thing, but if that were the case he would, per Airbnb customer service 3 separate times, he "can't even see the listing, let alone IB it. On the 4th occasion of this "glitch," I called CS and was guided through the process of actually blocking a guest. However! I was told it requires a call to CS so there's a verbal account of why, then they make you promise a kidney, after which they open a secret function only available thru an actual voice call.

It does seem that Airbnb should be able to simply disable the guest from viewing and/or booking once you click the No to hosting again button. It is the Host telling Airbnb that we do not want this guest to stay again, these are our homes/property and if we just didn't like the experience with a particular guest we should be able to say, I choose to not allow this person to stay with me again.

I totally agree! I had people illegally bring a pet to our home, and then deny it. They left after check-out and my basket for towels along with a throw blanket were missing... which they refused to acknowledge when I asked about it. I said I would not host again on the review, but here they are with an instant booking at my home again. This frustrates me because if I cancel their reservation I am the one that gets dinged. Instead I took pictures of anything that could leave the house, so if it is missing I can photo proof what/where it was prior to their check-in.

I've just said no to hosting a guest again, I wondered what would happen? I've never done it before ? The guest was quite high maintenance and made me feel my set up was inadequate, and made me doubt whether I want to carry on with hosting. They told me things I should change, and how to run the air bnb, (they were hosts too) and I went beyond and above the room they had booked to make them happy. I felt very wary of them, and gave them 4.9 * to be fair. They didn't leave the place too bad, but they moved furniture and didn't move it back. I just said no to hosting them again.

@Simone1155 nothing happens immediately to the guest. They aren't notified or anything. No other hosts can see that you would not host this person. They only see your review, and if they use Instant Book, the star ratings of the guest.

I'm a guest but have 25 years of professional customer service experience, as well as a good handle on managing boundaries in normal life and with customers. I'm currently in a reverse situation, btw, where the host often tries to take communications off the platform and I have to reaffirm the boundary. With high-maintenance folks like this, every time you let them cross a stated boundary, you're more likely to get a worse review from them, it's just how people are. It actually heightens their sense of entitlement and specialness, and turns you into a doormat for them to wipe their feet on as they leave the guest-host relationship.

If you're seeking such advice, I would recommend that you send them a message through the platform and say something like: "For your protection as well as my own, I require that all communications go through the Airbnb messaging platform. If I do not answer a message sent by x p.m. and after x a.m. within x amount of time, or if you have an emergency, I will welcome a text/call from you and will respond promptly. I sincerely hope you are enjoying your stay."

@Willene1 You can give them a review without sounding negative. Something like "I would recommend XX to hosts who are hands-on and available to communicate throughout the stay. I hope I was able to answer all of XX's questions."

It's time to put on those rose colored glasses and bask in the warm glow of nostalgia. We want to know something that you would love to experience again. What was so awesome, powerful, emotional, or exciting that you would love to do it again for the first time?

I am a new potential customer, thinking about the combi P1S + AMS simply because I hardly ever used 2 colors in one print. My current printer is supposed to be able to run multiple colors, but, after parking, it rapidly takes off for the rest of the print, so you have to sit next to the machine, AND be very fast.

The AMS would resolve that.

I love Ross Greene! I volunteer for Lives in the Balance and I've been reading his books for years. When I work with kids, "Kids do well when they can" is my "discipline plan." If a child is having any type of problem, I just ask them what's going on. Then we solve the problem together. This works perfectly in a non-coercive environment, because not participating is an option. I'm sure teachers at mainstream schools would assume that all the kids just opt-out all the time. Over six years, I've had two kids opt out for part of a class period each! It's very rare. It would be interesting to see what would happen at a mainstream school. Coercion is fundamental there, so they might just have a lot of kids opting out. To me, that means that the program should change, not that the kids need punishment.

I've been reflecting on this fundamental pillar of Dr Ross Greene\u2019s (@livesinthebalance) approach to living and working with kids, and the more I think about it, the more significant it seems. What it\u2019s really about, for me, is adult attitude. Most of the time, if kids aren\u2019t doing what their parents would like, our assumption is it\u2019s because they don\u2019t want to. Or they aren\u2019t motivated. Or they are lazy. We put it down to a lack of will. We get angry with them. We assume that if only they wanted to, they would be able to do what we ask them. So we try to make them.

The skills of self management don\u2019t really develop until adolescence (and neurological adolescence lasts until age 25) which means that a lot of us are frustrated by our kids not doing things which they are likely not to be capable of yet. Remembering their PE kit, or controlling their temper. Managing their impulses to shout rather than speak or picking up wet towels from the floor. Thinking before they speak. Brain development is an ongoing process, and it doesn\u2019t accelerate it if you\u2019re made to feel bad about what you\u2019re not able to do yet. Kids can do things one day, when the circumstances are right, and not another - that's the messy and non-linear way that development works.

For if someone lack the skills to do something, we can\u2019t solve that through consequences or rewards. It isn\u2019t a choice on their part, even if it looks like it is. We can\u2019t make them grow up faster through punishing them for their incompetence or telling them off. It makes no sense to get annoyed with them if they can\u2019t help it. Instead we have to accept where they are right now (even if we wish they were somewhere else) and work out how to make things work with that.

ANYHOO. I'm having a crisis because I'm almost 40. I refuse to call it a "mid-life crisis" though because that sounds like Mrs. Rodanski who lived next door when I was a kid and whose husband bought her a 1987 Pontiac Trans Am when she turned 40. But this did not make her a nicer person. She was still the same grumpy old lady always yelling at me over the fence to stop staring at her and for godsakes stop sucking on those bleepity-bleep dandelion stalks don't you know bleepity-bleep dogs pee on it?

So, I don't want to be like Mrs. Rodanski but then again, maybe I do. Maybe I do want to waddle about my garden in my robe and slippers with my hair up in ridiculous huge rollers while I smoke a cigarette with one hand and water my roses with the other. Maybe I do want to roar off to lunchin my flashy Pontiac Trans Am and lunch with the ladies just because I can!

Well, nope. I can't be Mrs. Rodanski because she only had one kid and I have twenty-five kids and none of them are named Bobby. To be fair, we never knew if Mrs. Rodanski's son was named Bobby. We just called him that because we thought he looked like a Bobby. That sounds terrible. What does a Bobby look like? Well, he looked like a pudgy boy with curly blonde hair, thick glasses and an affinity for wearing dark red polo shirts. He also wore his pants high tightly belted over his belly so that he resembled a double-link sausage. A double-link sausage wearing glasses.

OK, wow. So maybe I'm not Mrs. Rodanski with her flashy Trans Am but I think I like my full, crazy life. And I've missed blogging. I really have. Why did I ever stop? Well, I wrote two books, that's why. I was kinda tapped out. Burned out on words. e24fc04721

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