Put Your Foot in Your Mouth
Everyone smiles at a baby with its foot in its mouth. However, you don’t want to put your foot in your mouth as an adult.
I doubt most of you can physically get your foot to your mouth. Yet, most have probably had foot-in-your-mouth moments. You wish you had kept your mouth shut.
When you put your foot in your mouth you say something you regret.
Your words sound:
- Silly
- Mean
- Insulting
- Embarrassing
Once out of your mouth, you wish you could take those words back.
But you cannot. You end up in hot water.
Think before you speak.
Sometimes you need to bite your tongue instead of saying anything. Silence is golden more often than you realize.
Better to keep quiet than get off on the wrong foot.
“Don’t talk so much. You keep putting your foot in your mouth. Be sensible and turn off the flow!” (Proverbs 10:19 TLB).
Thanks to Karen Atwood for the photo.
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What fun to be free as a bird:
In honor of them, wave
Birds of a feather flock together is true for people as well as birds. A flock (noun) is a group of birds, animals, or people. When birds, animals, or people flock (verb) together, they get together. They form a group.
When we get mad as a wet hen, we get angry – very angry.
When we put our hand to the plow, we are ready to work.
Ready to sing, I stood before the crowd in my aunt’s church. However, the first words out of my mouth were, “I forgot.” At three-years-old, I had a senior moment.
If you beat your head against a wall, you try to do something that looks hopeless.
When cooking, we often put pots of food that need little attention on the back burner.
“O what a tangled web we weave,