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Reply to "Making time for kids? Study says quality trumps quantity"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I think we all know, deep in our guts, that a certain level of quantity matters. [/quote] I know a couple of kids who are now in their 20s that spent a significant part of their childhoods with nannies because their parents had high profile careers and traveled often. A great nanny or caretaker is fine. [b]I think you just need to make yourself feel better[/b]; that you mean something to your child. [/quote] Yes, just as people who leave their children with others to raise them need to make themselves feel better and [b]want to feel that they mean something to their child [/b]despite hours spent away from them. [/quote] You are beyond evil for spewing such filth. Stay at home all you want, creep, you aren't doing your kids any favors because you're an asshole. I'd rather be raised by a working mother, which I was, than an asshole any day of the week. [/quote] Not true. I've been a working mom or a long time and understand why many parents (both moms and dads) work. I was referring to those who work such long hours (by choice) that they rarely see their kids. Many of them are dating as well because they're single parents. It does matter, whether you want to get mad about it and engage in name-calling or not. [/quote]
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