#childrearing

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Dear self

and aligned mutuals,

Am I cringe? Sure, no more than anyone else. Should I post my cringe? I have no idea. Is it on-brand cringe? Yes.

The emotions I have pertaining to this video are immaculate and perhaps ineffable…

(I was playing peekaboo with a filter on tiktok).

Another frustrated rant here: the weirdness of people on the internet - and increasingly OFF the internet - who think that it is bad/wrong/suspicious for adults and children to interact.

This is batshit nonsense. How the hell do you expect children to learn how to adult if they’re not exposed to adults?! You can’t imitate what you never see. The way kids grow into functional adults is to encounter lots of functional adults so you can learn what on earth you’re supposed to be doing. Expecting kids to figure it out with nothing but one or two parents and maybe some extended family or teachers is how you screw up someone’s “normal meter”, because there’s no way of calibrating it.

It’s also how you get teens that weirdly seem to think that 1) all adults are in a position of authority, 2) authority and age are correlated, and 3) all adults have a duty of care towards kids and teens. Which is emphatically not true? There will be many occasions in your life where a younger person IS in charge and you need to follow their instructions. There will be many occasions when a teen or young adult encounters an adult who has no authority over them. And no random adult is required to parents a kid, or make special allowances for a kid who has come uninvited into their space.

I mean, you CAN do things for a kid if you want. But it’s optional. If a kid on a bus demands to know what you’re reading, you never have to show them and can tell them they’re being rude and shouldn’t bother strangers. But there’s a weird trend lately to say “no you’re required to be nice to them and teach them because they’re a kid!”

Or if a teenager comes into a forum for an adult show and then throws a fit at adult themes, the correct response is you laugh at the teen and kick them back out, because clearly they’re not mature enough to participate. (This is pointedly aimed at the brats complaining about “but that ship is a bad influence to kids!” in fucking Hannibal, a very adult TV series that no sane person would consider a healthy influence.)

I’m increasingly annoyed that there’s an abnormally loud group of people who think children are simultaneously some sort of communal responsibility to raise when they’re tiny AND that once they’re bigger if they talk to an adult they’re be irreversibly “tainted” or ruined or corrupted and therefore must be kept in abusive ignorance.

Help! I’m Making A Weirdly Big Deal Out Of A Thing That I Think Is No Big Deal So Why Does It Have To Be Such A Big Deal, It’s Honestly Not That Big Of A Deal, So Everyone Should Just Do What I Say Because Why Do They Care About This So Much Like It’s Some Kind Of Big Deal, It’s Functionally Meaningless, That’s Why I Must Have My Way Or Else, Stop Overreacting!!!!!

Care And Feeding, Slate,31 October 2021:

Dear Care and Feeding,

My tween has requested they/them pronouns and a new name. We are changing our habits on the pronouns, but we haven’t gone along with the name change. Though their first name is stereotypically feminine, we more often use the shorter stereotypically masculine form (think Samantha to Sam). Their middle name is gender ambiguous. These names were chosen with much love following a family/cultural naming tradition. While we are supportive of using any version of these given names to reflect our child’s gender, we aren’t on board with a name change. We will not call Sam(antha) Simon, Stevie or Susie. Is this so wrong?

—What’s in a Name?

Dear What’s In A Name?

I can’t think of any family tradition more important than making sure children know that they are beholden to the whims of their parents forever, and that they must never be allowed to assert themselves or self-advocate in any way that does not entirely comport with their parents’ personal preferences. After all, it was your child’s decision to be born to you personally, and now here they come tap-dancing into the world as a full-on independent human as if they didn’t specifically ask Baby Jesus to assign them to you! They had every opportunity to choose to be born to any other family on earth, but they didn’t, and so now they’ve thereby agreed to have every part of their identity dictated by you, indefinitely and without even the mildest opposition.

The last thing you want is your child growing up to be a self-assured, independent human who knows their own mind and can ensure that their needs are met on planet earth! That’s not what parenting is all about! You lovingly gave them a name and you will lovingly use it at them no matter how much they hate it, lovingly!

Anyway, you said it yourself: what’s in a name?? It’s such a tiny, piddly thing — since it doesn’t matter at all, and it’s practically not even worth caring about not even a little bit, and it really is just wholly inconsequential, it’s genuinely just downright silly that anyone cares all that much about what they’re called, like truly, who could even be bothered? Not you, that’s for sure! That’s why you can only call your kid one of two names that you came up with a decade ago and nothing else ever no matter what!

What could be more loving than honoring your child’s name and pronouns? Why, forcing your child to use the name you gave them because your personal preference is more important than your child having the core of their identity respected by the most important people in their life, of course! Nothing wrong with that! Stay strong in your convictions, and you will enjoy many great opportunities to call your child by the name you gave them in the coming years — to their voicemail, to their email “spam” folder, and in text messages to phone numbers they no longer use.

theconcealedweapon:

“Why are so many adults living with their parents?”

Because you literally told them to.

You told them to not buy things they can’t afford. So they didn’t buy a house or apartment that they can’t afford.

You told them that financial assistance should be voluntary instead of forced through taxes. So they accepted voluntary help from their parents which reduces the likelihood of them needing government assistance.

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