Don't tell me about Scrooge.
Scrooge had two models, his father and Fezziwig.
Scrooge lived in an old house.
DOn't View Scrooge as a good role model.
He never complains and will not criticize Scrooge.
I'm just being a Scrooge.
He never complains, he will not criticize Scrooge.
Gosh, don't be such a Scrooge.
The money is given to the Scrooge.
Like Scrooge seeing his tombstone.
Scrooge does not yet know who the dead man is.
So just what is it that saved Scrooge from himself?
But he was a tight-fisted hand at the grind-stone, Scrooge!
Scrooge can't change the past, but he can change the future.
Certainly Scrooge's sudden reclamation bears striking similarities to such miraculous religious conversions.
What can Scrooge's journey teach us about treating and rehabilitating chronic embitterment?
Scrooge does not yet know that the loathsome man who died was him.
Whether the Christmas visions would or would not convert Scrooge, they convert us.
This sometimes elusive"faith-state" seems to have been Ebenezer Scrooge's antitdote to his chronic embitterment.
Scrooge, of course, does not listen and dismisses him as an
undigested piece of meat.
Mr. Scrooge is completely consumed by bitterness,
hostility and resentment, yet doesn't even know it.
In the new timeline, Scrooge's altruism transforms him into a“second father” to Tiny Tim,
who survives.
This is exactly what Scrooge wonders aloud about himself during his awesome and impressive visitations.
Scrooge would play out his character story of hardness, cruelty, and the inability to love.
(Of course, most people manifesting"Scrooge syndrome" feel no need for treatment
and seldom seek it out.).
His niece looks exactly like Scrooge's sister and awakens memories of the feeling of loving her.
His niece looked exactly like Scrooge's sister and awakened memories of the feeling of loving her.
Scrooge does not yet know that the loathsome man who died in this vision was indeed him.