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raayjayy
· 8 years ago
· FIRST
I don't get it . . .
huinsaeyeou
· 8 years ago
Whenever we misbehaved, we got grabbed by the ear, hand, arm, ass etc. and got hit with this demon.
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huinsaeyeou
· 8 years ago
And also, la chancla translates to the shoe(not sure if there's a better way to translate that).
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celia
· 8 years ago
The flip flop
23
awake_ash
· 8 years ago
I laughed so hard at this because it's so accurate lol. Those beasts will hunt you down.
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deleted
· 8 years ago
I used to call my ma the chancla ninja
14
callitlife3
· 8 years ago
I always thought chancla meant sandal, but like a casual sandal.
2
arcticpokeman
· 8 years ago
Not only La chancla, El Cinto (a belt) was hard af
1
steve_rogers
· 8 years ago
Does anyone remember the wooden spoon
16
deleted
· 8 years ago
How about the slotted plastic ladel? *Shudder*
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deleted
· 8 years ago
Or the wire
3
guest
· 8 years ago
Or the belt
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guest
· 8 years ago
Lol memories...
deleted
· 8 years ago
Hissss
2
guest
· 8 years ago
Mexican? This is also every South Asian household's solution.
1
pattywhack125
· 8 years ago
I'M CRYING OF LAUGHTER & HORROR
guest
· 8 years ago
It was/is the Terlik for the turkish.
1
guest
· 8 years ago
It's called The Chapal in South Asian households
1
guest
· 8 years ago
Growing up in Nigeria it was the cane you had to fear. Essentially a long, flexible piece of wood. The thin ones could leave a welt that would sting for hours but broke easily. The thick ones looked mean but didn't hurt as much. For maximum effect, the medium-sized ones were best. I got many strokes of the cane cos I was a little bag of lies much of the time. Once I figured out the truth hurt far less, gone were the canes. Childhood was fun!
3
callitlife3
· 8 years ago
True.
1