Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
I literally don't even understand how to make close friends and have/be a support system in our modern society. We are not religious. We've made some okay friends with neighbors and through sports, but I wouldn't call any of these people a "support system" and none of them were around before my kids went to elementary school.
I’ve lived in my current (non DC area) only about a year and have a network of close friends. Some through church yes. Others through neighborhood get togethers, kids’ school functions and volunteer work. You have to put in the effort to get results - you have to join groups, go out, be extroverted (at least at first). And yes, some areas of the country are friendlier and more open to meeting new people than others…that’s geographically specific, not an indictment of “modern society.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
I literally don't even understand how to make close friends and have/be a support system in our modern society. We are not religious. We've made some okay friends with neighbors and through sports, but I wouldn't call any of these people a "support system" and none of them were around before my kids went to elementary school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
I literally don't even understand how to make close friends and have/be a support system in our modern society. We are not religious. We've made some okay friends with neighbors and through sports, but I wouldn't call any of these people a "support system" and none of them were around before my kids went to elementary school.
Yeah people always say it takes a village. Where is that village? It’s either people with family around OR it’s a mantra repeated by users who take advantage of others’ time and energy.
I'm a little sad reading this .. you don't have friends?
If a friend asks for help it's taking advantage?
You should share that with your therapist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
Other than the church bit I agree
That wasn’t an opinion. She is involved in a church.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
It's okay to shut up sometimes
Other than the church bit I agree
That wasn’t an opinion. She is involved in a church.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
Other than the church bit I agree
Anonymous wrote:It seems that some people say that intensive parenting is the problem but the outcomes of it seem to be good- healthier kids, better relationship with parents etc. so is the problem more that we need to structure society better to enable more intensive parenting (like better leave, more flexible jobs, more support for SAH parents)?
Anonymous wrote:It seems that some people say that intensive parenting is the problem but the outcomes of it seem to be good- healthier kids, better relationship with parents etc. so is the problem more that we need to structure society better to enable more intensive parenting (like better leave, more flexible jobs, more support for SAH parents)?
Anonymous wrote:What are you talking about? The results are disastrous. Mental health issues galore, lack of agency, lack of independence.
Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
I literally don't even understand how to make close friends and have/be a support system in our modern society. We are not religious. We've made some okay friends with neighbors and through sports, but I wouldn't call any of these people a "support system" and none of them were around before my kids went to elementary school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
I literally don't even understand how to make close friends and have/be a support system in our modern society. We are not religious. We've made some okay friends with neighbors and through sports, but I wouldn't call any of these people a "support system" and none of them were around before my kids went to elementary school.
Yeah people always say it takes a village. Where is that village? It’s either people with family around OR it’s a mantra repeated by users who take advantage of others’ time and energy.
I'm a little sad reading this .. you don't have friends?
If a friend asks for help it's taking advantage?
You should share that with your therapist.
I don’t have friends. I have moved several times over the past 5 years. I have acquaintances through my friends. Family is all over the world, none remotely close to me. I had a therapist who moved to a different practice and left me too, lol!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Intensive parenting causes the lack of support as parents don’t have time to have their own friends or their own lives. Too busy cultivating their kids so they can grab a spot in the shrinking middle class or smaller but bigger than it used to be UMC.
Some activities come with a support system though. Can’t deny that.
I’m getting my kids and I involved in a Church.
I literally don't even understand how to make close friends and have/be a support system in our modern society. We are not religious. We've made some okay friends with neighbors and through sports, but I wouldn't call any of these people a "support system" and none of them were around before my kids went to elementary school.
Yeah people always say it takes a village. Where is that village? It’s either people with family around OR it’s a mantra repeated by users who take advantage of others’ time and energy.
I'm a little sad reading this .. you don't have friends?
If a friend asks for help it's taking advantage?
You should share that with your therapist.