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Infants, Toddlers, & Preschoolers
Reply to "Indian Parenting"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Who are all you Indians who were allowed to eat in their rooms? I'm Indian and I can't think of any Indian child I was friends with (or related to) growing up who was allowed to take food anywhere in the home but the kitchen or dinning table. My parents were always very concerned about crumbs, and messes, and bugs, not to mention that they insisted we had all meals at home as a family. Even now that it's just the two of them at home, my parents will literally NEVER eat in front of the TV - even if it means pausing a show or movie they are in the middle of watching to sit at the table for 20 minutes to have a meal.[/quote] Yeah, we weren't even allowed to eat in front of the TV! I am Indian. I did lots of chores, inside and out. I was scrubbing toilets and floors by the fourth grade, if not earlier. Maybe my friends' parents said, "my daughter's friend, she is in eighth grade, and she built the fence around her parents' house. Why are Indians so obsessed with woodworking?" [/quote] Haha!! OP, this basically describes my Indian-American childhood too. Except I never built a fence. I did, however, help finish the basement. Maybe the neighbors were like "why is this Indian family obsessed with DIY?". It's because my dad didn't want to hire someone out to do it when he could do it himself, that's why.[/quote] Both of these describe a lot of my childhood in an Irish-English-American family. I did lots of yard work and also helped to build a screen porch. I had a dad who didn't trust anyone else to work on his house. I went on to a great college and then law school, at least partly because I wasn't afraid of hard work. [/quote] My brother (Indian) married an Irish woman, and I have to say that it was really easy for our families to get along. Hard-working, super family oriented people. [/quote]
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