Follow you on what? I need a answer to this lol
Answer:The second option B I believe
Explanation:
Answer:
He thinks of it as an opportunity to be with family.
Explanation:
"Billy Mason Farrell," his father had said, "I want you to listen to me. We need you to stay at Grandma M's tonight. I know how you feel about her, and I’m not saying you’re wrong, but there isn’t enough room for all of us here at the main farm house."
"I told you I should have stayed home!" Billy protested plaintively. "I'm missing the first game of the playoffs, and my team really needs me!"
"I understand—" began his father.
"No, you don’t understand," said Billy, "because you never cared about anything like I care about baseball, not in your whole life."
"I'm not going to argue with you," said his father. "My family lives on this farm, we come out here for one week every summer, and Grandma M needs to be included in this visit. I want you to take one for the team."
From the excerpt gotten from the book "Legacy of Billy Mason" Billy's father sees his visit to the farm as an opportunity to spend ample time with family.
Yes, we agree with Morrie about our society’s emphasis on youth.
In the second installment of The Professor, Morrie is portrayed as having been exceptionally liberal for his time and for his age. The first indication that Morrie is ahead of the popular culture is his acceptance of the research position at the mental institution, where, as a further showing of his liberal qualities, breaks the rules and befriends the most difficult patients, each of whom responds to Morrie more than they do their doctors and psychiatrists.
Morrie's so-called radical values are also exemplified by his unusually intimate relationship with his students, Mitch included. Like the students who protest in Washington D.C., and those who took over Ford Hall to fight racism at the university, Morrie believes in the progression of culture.
The culture he has created for himself does not adhere to the popular rules he protests against, and he fights to change popular social values when they do not agree with his own. Morrie continues to be very progressively minded even in his old age, and often reminds Mitch that he and everyone else is constantly changing form; his self is in continuous transition, despite his age. It is never too late, he says, to change. Morrie applies this belief to the culture that surrounds him and fights to alter it if the cause is one worth his dedication.
Learn more about Morrie here brainly.com/question/15465844
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