Hunter Biden is a perfect example. |
+1. Honestly it speaks to a different set of psychological problems. |
??? SAHD is actually a hard job. Why would a dud be good at this? |
Unless you are living paycheck to paycheck, or have a dysfunctional marriage, you shouldn't be operating in survival mode as a parent once you are in the elementary school years. If you are still in this mode, then of course it is influencing the kid in a negative way. |
Interesting. How so? |
I think it's nature. What I wonder is why so many of these duds are able to marry and have children? Why aren't women picking better? |
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I’m interested in the nature vs. nurture thing, particularly work ethic.
Dud XDH, his mom and two siblings all lack anything resembling a work ethic. I could tell stories, but I don’t want to out them. Suffice it to say, none of the three kids is really financially viable, although two of them hold down jobs at least. My parents and sibling are really hard working. My DD has an amazing work ethic, attended a top ivy, has won merit scholarships to grad school, and so on. It’s hard to get DS off the sofa and at 25 he’s definitely not able to support himself. What does DCUM say? Did I parent two kids completely differently? Is there something genetic going on? I’ve googled the heredibility of work ethic and studies say different things. |
Possibly genetic, but more likely he learned from his male role model (dad) |
The alpha males want it all - successful career, loads of money, well educated good looking wife, well run households and high achieving kids. They look for women who are intelligent, college educated, umc or above, can manage the socializing, household and kids - without their (DH) input. In DMV you will meet the h umc and rich SAHMs who have impressive academic and career credentials and who are very connected. |
I think it's genetic. Just like one child inherited your grey eyes and the other child inherited your DH's smile. Our thumb prints are on our children in more ways than we realize. |
| My step-BIL is a total dud. As a parent, I now feel a lot of empathy for my step-FIL because it must be hard for him to watch (even though with the benefit of hindsight he make a lot of parenting decisions that contributed to his son being a dud). Step-BIL is 50, went to law school but has been laid-off from several low-level legal jobs and now is basically 100% subsidized by his parents. He lives in a small rental in a cheap midwestern city and drives his parents' old cars. He tends to look down on people who are successful for "selling out". He also believes a lot of crazy internet rumors and almost died of COVID because he wouldn't get vaccinated. He only has one friend he sees regularly and has only had one serious girlfriend since college and that was just for a few years (she was a foreign student and I think she dropped him once she had been in the US for long enough to realize she was dating a loser). he is always stopping by to hang out with his parents because he has nothing else going on. At least he is nice to his parents but the entire thing kind of painful to watch. His sister, in contrast, is successful with two kids. |
His brother, Beau Biden, was a hard-working lawyer that devoted his life to public service. He served overseas in the Army as a military officer and was the Delaware Attorney General. Same mom and dad, and a vastly different human than Hunter. |
I thought I could change him. |
I already posted that boys relate to their father, and he is their role model. You were a role model for your DD, not your son, unfortunately. |
The reason they are all UMC/UC is because you wouldn’t call someone from a lower class family a dud. Lack of ambition, poor career potential, low educational attainment, etc are the norm - those who achieve more stand out as exceptions. “Dud” is only possible when you start with elevated expectations and have somewhere to drop to. It’s a very classist phrase. |