Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, suddenly all parents are bad at raising boys. /s
The actual reason is that stereotypical boy traits are being less valued in schools and workplaces, while girls have more opportunities than ever, so boys suddenly feel a disadvantage. Add in social media and “manosphere” stuff and that’s it.
This. They’re told by all their authority figures that they’re the ones who caused the harm to all those who have been victimized throughout society. Then they have to reconcile guilt that they never should’ve had with their own masculinity and instincts. This isn’t wholly a parent problem although I’ll be the first to say that parents who pile on to this nonsense don’t help.
Pray tell what are these stereotypical boy traits that are no longer valued,,?
Tell me you don’t have school age children without telling me.
Are you kidding?
Basically all male centric traits are swept aside now under the new banner of “kindness.”
But they are not biologically boy traits. They are traits some children have and perhaps more boys have those traits, but it’s not just boy traits.
Are you saying that a girl who is a tactile learner and learns by doing and who needs more outside activity shouldn’t receive that because she’s a girl?
DP, but this response is an excellent example of the confident stupidity and ignorance that now dominates almost all of our societal discourse. People seem to be less and less capable of perceiving nuance as time goes on; everyone is engaging in black and white thinking and just trying to “win” rather than even attempt to *think* about what another person is saying before responding with their own (most likely) incorrect and/or irrelevant counterpoint.
What’s the most interesting about your ignorant and uneducated response? Is that the post you are responding to is saying it’s way more nuance than the black-and-white thinking that schools are bad for boys and good for girls.
It’s simply not true. It’s way more nuanced..
The problem is we believe schools should be one way for everyone and when that doesn’t work, we change to another one way. But we need to do is offer different options for kids, depending on the way they learn..
Your post is almost incoherent.
Only to you, hon
You dumb, girl
Still can’t name a trait. But sure keep posting nonsense and pretend we forgot that you can’t think of one trait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just finished reading Boys Adrift by Leonard Sax. It discusses the reasons why many boys fail to launch, many of which have been mentioned in this thread.
I highly recommend this book if you are raising a boy.
Does he imagine it’s just harder now to compete on a level playing field?
Does he really think that meat milk eggs are causing problems?
Revenge of the forsaken God phenomenon… I mean, can’t he just admit men work too much and they’re not home with their children?
He does not say that it is harder to compete on a level playing field. But he does say that schools having more emphasis on direct instruction and testing rather than discovery is less conducive in teaching boys.
He does not mention anything about meat, milk or eggs. He does talk about microplastics in the bloodstream and medicating stimulants for ADHD.
He does say a lack of good male role models also contributes to failure to launch. This is both within the larger culture but also within individual families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve raised our four boys like you’d raise girls as the social/ emotional skills of girls are more valued in school-aged years. They all play a string instruments and began ballet at 2 (they still all are in dance at 4,6,9,13). They don’t play traditional boy sports so we can avoid the toxic masculine energy. They speak two languages. We require exquisite manners and don’t tolerate rough housing. They also have no access to screens without a parent present.
While kind of extreme, I don’t disagree. If we celebrated “softer” boys things would be better in the classroom and outside it. It’s not fair to girls to be surrounded by toxic masculinity from such an early age.
Boys who are naturally sensitive, caring, and know to treat girls, are their grandmas secretly favorite grandchild, same with teachers, they usually do not become friends with the those stereotype macho boys. And it’s not unusual for those “boys will be boys” types to bully the boys who aren’t like them.
Someone earlier said it’s not the parents, it’s everyone else. No. It’s the parents.
Yup. we have a boy like the type you described, and eventually had to move him to private school. He was fine in k-2, but then the toxic alpha male atmosphere bgan to take a toll socially. And it was clear many of the teachers preferred girls, and he easy pickedu p on that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, suddenly all parents are bad at raising boys. /s
The actual reason is that stereotypical boy traits are being less valued in schools and workplaces, while girls have more opportunities than ever, so boys suddenly feel a disadvantage. Add in social media and “manosphere” stuff and that’s it.
This. They’re told by all their authority figures that they’re the ones who caused the harm to all those who have been victimized throughout society. Then they have to reconcile guilt that they never should’ve had with their own masculinity and instincts. This isn’t wholly a parent problem although I’ll be the first to say that parents who pile on to this nonsense don’t help.
Pray tell what are these stereotypical boy traits that are no longer valued,,?
Tell me you don’t have school age children without telling me.
Are you kidding?
Basically all male centric traits are swept aside now under the new banner of “kindness.”
But they are not biologically boy traits. They are traits some children have and perhaps more boys have those traits, but it’s not just boy traits.
Are you saying that a girl who is a tactile learner and learns by doing and who needs more outside activity shouldn’t receive that because she’s a girl?
DP, but this response is an excellent example of the confident stupidity and ignorance that now dominates almost all of our societal discourse. People seem to be less and less capable of perceiving nuance as time goes on; everyone is engaging in black and white thinking and just trying to “win” rather than even attempt to *think* about what another person is saying before responding with their own (most likely) incorrect and/or irrelevant counterpoint.
What’s the most interesting about your ignorant and uneducated response? Is that the post you are responding to is saying it’s way more nuance than the black-and-white thinking that schools are bad for boys and good for girls.
It’s simply not true. It’s way more nuanced..
The problem is we believe schools should be one way for everyone and when that doesn’t work, we change to another one way. But we need to do is offer different options for kids, depending on the way they learn..
Your post is almost incoherent.
Only to you, hon
You dumb, girl
Still can’t name a trait. But sure keep posting nonsense and pretend we forgot that you can’t think of one trait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just finished reading Boys Adrift by Leonard Sax. It discusses the reasons why many boys fail to launch, many of which have been mentioned in this thread.
I highly recommend this book if you are raising a boy.
Does he imagine it’s just harder now to compete on a level playing field?
Does he really think that meat milk eggs are causing problems?
Revenge of the forsaken God phenomenon… I mean, can’t he just admit men work too much and they’re not home with their children?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve raised our four boys like you’d raise girls as the social/ emotional skills of girls are more valued in school-aged years. They all play a string instruments and began ballet at 2 (they still all are in dance at 4,6,9,13). They don’t play traditional boy sports so we can avoid the toxic masculine energy. They speak two languages. We require exquisite manners and don’t tolerate rough housing. They also have no access to screens without a parent present.
While kind of extreme, I don’t disagree. If we celebrated “softer” boys things would be better in the classroom and outside it. It’s not fair to girls to be surrounded by toxic masculinity from such an early age.
Boys who are naturally sensitive, caring, and know to treat girls, are their grandmas secretly favorite grandchild, same with teachers, they usually do not become friends with the those stereotype macho boys. And it’s not unusual for those “boys will be boys” types to bully the boys who aren’t like them.
Someone earlier said it’s not the parents, it’s everyone else. No. It’s the parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We’ve raised our four boys like you’d raise girls as the social/ emotional skills of girls are more valued in school-aged years. They all play a string instruments and began ballet at 2 (they still all are in dance at 4,6,9,13). They don’t play traditional boy sports so we can avoid the toxic masculine energy. They speak two languages. We require exquisite manners and don’t tolerate rough housing. They also have no access to screens without a parent present.
Post in 20 years with your results.
Anonymous wrote:I think we did pretty well with our DS. Post-covid he tried online and sitting in college classes and didn't like it. He went to trade school and is doing very well. He has a very mature respectful relationship with a young woman his age who is headed to law school soon. He's kind to animals and all living things. He has several different and diverse friend groups. He's paying his bills and we are generous with large gifts b/c he's respectful and it's a tradition in both our families to support the adult kids well - when they're young and they need it (not hoarding the big inheritance until the end when they're senior citizens and don't need it).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, suddenly all parents are bad at raising boys. /s
The actual reason is that stereotypical boy traits are being less valued in schools and workplaces, while girls have more opportunities than ever, so boys suddenly feel a disadvantage. Add in social media and “manosphere” stuff and that’s it.
This. They’re told by all their authority figures that they’re the ones who caused the harm to all those who have been victimized throughout society. Then they have to reconcile guilt that they never should’ve had with their own masculinity and instincts. This isn’t wholly a parent problem although I’ll be the first to say that parents who pile on to this nonsense don’t help.
Pray tell what are these stereotypical boy traits that are no longer valued,,?
Tell me you don’t have school age children without telling me.
Are you kidding?
Basically all male centric traits are swept aside now under the new banner of “kindness.”
But they are not biologically boy traits. They are traits some children have and perhaps more boys have those traits, but it’s not just boy traits.
Are you saying that a girl who is a tactile learner and learns by doing and who needs more outside activity shouldn’t receive that because she’s a girl?
DP, but this response is an excellent example of the confident stupidity and ignorance that now dominates almost all of our societal discourse. People seem to be less and less capable of perceiving nuance as time goes on; everyone is engaging in black and white thinking and just trying to “win” rather than even attempt to *think* about what another person is saying before responding with their own (most likely) incorrect and/or irrelevant counterpoint.
Anonymous wrote:I just finished reading Boys Adrift by Leonard Sax. It discusses the reasons why many boys fail to launch, many of which have been mentioned in this thread.
I highly recommend this book if you are raising a boy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure, suddenly all parents are bad at raising boys. /s
The actual reason is that stereotypical boy traits are being less valued in schools and workplaces, while girls have more opportunities than ever, so boys suddenly feel a disadvantage. Add in social media and “manosphere” stuff and that’s it.
This. They’re told by all their authority figures that they’re the ones who caused the harm to all those who have been victimized throughout society. Then they have to reconcile guilt that they never should’ve had with their own masculinity and instincts. This isn’t wholly a parent problem although I’ll be the first to say that parents who pile on to this nonsense don’t help.
Pray tell what are these stereotypical boy traits that are no longer valued,,?
Tell me you don’t have school age children without telling me.
Are you kidding?
Basically all male centric traits are swept aside now under the new banner of “kindness.”
But they are not biologically boy traits. They are traits some children have and perhaps more boys have those traits, but it’s not just boy traits.
Are you saying that a girl who is a tactile learner and learns by doing and who needs more outside activity shouldn’t receive that because she’s a girl?
DP, but this response is an excellent example of the confident stupidity and ignorance that now dominates almost all of our societal discourse. People seem to be less and less capable of perceiving nuance as time goes on; everyone is engaging in black and white thinking and just trying to “win” rather than even attempt to *think* about what another person is saying before responding with their own (most likely) incorrect and/or irrelevant counterpoint.
What’s the most interesting about your ignorant and uneducated response? Is that the post you are responding to is saying it’s way more nuance than the black-and-white thinking that schools are bad for boys and good for girls.
It’s simply not true. It’s way more nuanced..
The problem is we believe schools should be one way for everyone and when that doesn’t work, we change to another one way. But we need to do is offer different options for kids, depending on the way they learn..
Your post is almost incoherent.
Only to you, hon
You dumb, girl
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s wrong with boys?
My son is 13 and seems fine to me. He is polite and well mannered. I raise him the same as I do my girls: he has chores, has to play in instrument, be in a sport, reads books at home, screen time is limited, doesn’t have a phone yet, doesn’t hang around with the boys doing the wrong things, excels in school. I’m not doing any special “boy” parenting, just trying my best to be an overall good parent.
Why do they have to be in a sport? I understand the schools requirements to learn all sports but not every kid wants to play a sport outside of school. Maybe this is one of the problems. For some reason parents can’t deal with their boys not wanting to play sports. The parents pretend that it’s all about health but it’s not. Nobody needs a sport to be healthy. And girls who play softball can tend to be overweight. Guys on football teams can be obese and they play certain positions.
Stop glorifying sports might help with aggression and meanness in boys. This is the parents fault 100%.
As a mom to boys I consider that my boys will have more muscle mass than females and will have to learn how to use that to work and to stay in shape. I figure they will need to do more hands on work around the house, and I figure they may be called up to war. I also realize that boys tend to socialize through sports and so sports is a way to teach many social skills and resilience skills. It's not the only thing I think is important and my kids are involved in church and scouts, and band, but it's something that I think is important for these reasons.