The reality is that is not safe any more for young women to go outside and run/bike alone.
It has not gotten less safe for females to be outside walking or bike riding. When was it safe? Not in the 90s when I loved to walk alone and bike alone. The predators were out in the high crime 1990s. It's much safer now although safety is never guaranteed.
Incels because girls have become more “unkind,” less gracious, conceited, wannabes. Doesn’t help they prance around with barely any clothes on- crop tops, super short skirts, shorts. Ass and crotch revealing leggings. What’s the name for girls/women hating women groups? There’s that too. Depression out there, yes. Add anger and the need for anger management to the top of the list.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would agree it is screens, lazy parents, and over accommodating every discomfort. The amount of teens on anxiety meds, SSRIs, and receiving regular therapy sessions is astounding. They don’t even have real problems yet
Look up the Harvard study on chores. For some reason we think over helping our kids will make them less stressed and happier and it hasn't. We just took away things that made them feel empowered (chores, autonomy, responsibility) and shoved travel sports and SAT prep classes in their faces instead.
Anonymous wrote:This generation of parents is to blame.
Too much pressure, too much coddling. It's a twisted mix.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would agree it is screens, lazy parents, and over accommodating every discomfort. The amount of teens on anxiety meds, SSRIs, and receiving regular therapy sessions is astounding. They don’t even have real problems yet
Look up the Harvard study on chores. For some reason we think over helping our kids will make them less stressed and happier and it hasn't. We just took away things that made them feel empowered (chores, autonomy, responsibility) and shoved travel sports and SAT prep classes in their faces instead.
I don’t think chores moves the needle much. Rather, it’s any anger, disappointment, sadness, grief, struggle our kids face we feel we need fix it by medicating them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, the teen birth rate is at a record low, re: teens moving in a positive direction.
Hmm also likely means less sex and relationships which may be contributing to sadness
By relationships do you only mean dating? I personally prefer that my child not date or be sexually active as a teen. I can’t prevent it of course, but I would prefer that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would agree it is screens, lazy parents, and over accommodating every discomfort. The amount of teens on anxiety meds, SSRIs, and receiving regular therapy sessions is astounding. They don’t even have real problems yet
Look up the Harvard study on chores. For some reason we think over helping our kids will make them less stressed and happier and it hasn't. We just took away things that made them feel empowered (chores, autonomy, responsibility) and shoved travel sports and SAT prep classes in their faces instead.
I don’t think chores moves the needle much. Rather, it’s any anger, disappointment, sadness, grief, struggle our kids face we feel we need fix it by medicating them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, the teen birth rate is at a record low, re: teens moving in a positive direction.
Hmm also likely means less sex and relationships which may be contributing to sadness
By relationships do you only mean dating? I personally prefer that my child not date or be sexually active as a teen. I can’t prevent it of course, but I would prefer that.
No dating at all?
I said “prefer.” Of course they will likely date and I won’t be a roadblock to that. But I’d still prefer if they didn’t in high school.
Why would you prefer they didn’t date in HS, PP? Just curious.
NP.. it's a distraction, and for some teens, especially girls, it becomes their whole world. I've seen teenagers get so wrapped up in their BF/GF relationships that everything else falls by wayside. Most teens are emotionally (and mentally) too immature to handle a serious relationship.
My 16 yr old boy is dating, but, it's not too serious. The girl actually puts a lot of boundaries in their relationship. They see each other mostly in school, and not outside of school. I think they went out by themselves a total of 3x in the past six months. They are both serious students -- ie straight As, high SAT scores.
I could totally see my son getting wrapped up in her if she didn't put those boundaries in place.
I also have a younger teen girl, and I've told her that I do not want her to get into a serious relationship in HS. She can "date" in HS, but not seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would agree it is screens, lazy parents, and over accommodating every discomfort. The amount of teens on anxiety meds, SSRIs, and receiving regular therapy sessions is astounding. They don’t even have real problems yet
Look up the Harvard study on chores. For some reason we think over helping our kids will make them less stressed and happier and it hasn't. We just took away things that made them feel empowered (chores, autonomy, responsibility) and shoved travel sports and SAT prep classes in their faces instead.
Anonymous wrote:I would agree it is screens, lazy parents, and over accommodating every discomfort. The amount of teens on anxiety meds, SSRIs, and receiving regular therapy sessions is astounding. They don’t even have real problems yet
Anonymous wrote:For those who claim that kids are better prepared / smarter than previous generations; this is incorrect. I hire a new class of 22 year-olds each year and have for 30 years. Intelligence, work ethic, and executive function have been declining since about 2015. The article's author is right about the factors noted, but there is a mega trend that underlies everything: the professional jobs that we were all taught would lead to success and happiness are drying up, so more and more kids are being "trained" for a world that doesn't exist. Ironically, we are inculcating fragility in our kids in order to make them super PMCs (professional managerial class)--but they will find very actual jobs open to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, the teen birth rate is at a record low, re: teens moving in a positive direction.
Hmm also likely means less sex and relationships which may be contributing to sadness
By relationships do you only mean dating? I personally prefer that my child not date or be sexually active as a teen. I can’t prevent it of course, but I would prefer that.
Anonymous wrote:The reality is that is not safe any more for young women to go outside and run/bike alone.