Anonymous wrote:I'm a little tired of "non-Americans" or "immigrants" living in America and constantly bashing it. If you don't like it, go home.
signed wife of someone who immigrated here as a 10 year old who agrees with me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:American citizen but raised in South Asia. I am finding it difficult since the way I was raised is so different from how it is here. I cannot stand disrespect from kids and it is not something you see where I was raised. It causes a lot of fights in our home.
The things my kid gets away with, my parents would have abused the hell out of me for that.
I'm a born and raised Caucasian American, married for 20 years to an Asian immigrant and disrespect was not tolerated in my house growing up, and I don't tolerate it from my teen and tween. I don't know why this stereotype persists. And I don't abuse them to get their respect. If your kids are getting away with it, that's on you, not American culture.
Anonymous wrote:American citizen but raised in South Asia. I am finding it difficult since the way I was raised is so different from how it is here. I cannot stand disrespect from kids and it is not something you see where I was raised. It causes a lot of fights in our home.
The things my kid gets away with, my parents would have abused the hell out of me for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:American citizen but raised in South Asia. I am finding it difficult since the way I was raised is so different from how it is here. I cannot stand disrespect from kids and it is not something you see where I was raised. It causes a lot of fights in our home.
The things my kid gets away with, my parents would have abused the hell out of me for that.
I'm a born and raised Caucasian American, married for 20 years to an Asian immigrant and disrespect was not tolerated in my house growing up, and I don't tolerate it from my teen and tween. I don't know why this stereotype persists. And I don't abuse them to get their respect. If your kids are getting away with it, that's on you, not American culture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little tired of "non-Americans" or "immigrants" living in America and constantly bashing it. If you don't like it, go home.
signed wife of someone who immigrated here as a 10 year old who agrees with me
As an immigrant, I agree. I don't think that attitude is really common though, most immigrants I know are happy to be here! The rich "expat" types are the annoying ones I encounter who find everything better back home.
Speak for yourself. What backwater country did you come here from?
Anonymous wrote:American citizen but raised in South Asia. I am finding it difficult since the way I was raised is so different from how it is here. I cannot stand disrespect from kids and it is not something you see where I was raised. It causes a lot of fights in our home.
The things my kid gets away with, my parents would have abused the hell out of me for that.
Anonymous wrote:Let’s not turn this into an ugly “us vs them” conversation. What the hell is wrong with some of you.
Let’s try this again:
Most global cultures are family-centered. The U.S. is individual-centered. There are pros and cons for each. Think about the challenges of raising a teen and now add navigating these complex cultural elements. It’s very hard. All a parent wants to do is the right thing. Now try navigating different playbooks that speak to what “right” is in sometimes very different terms. It adds another layer to an already challenging time.
If this is not your personal family experience and you are unable to add something thoughtful to lift someone up or ask sincere questions to learn more, then this post is not for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little tired of "non-Americans" or "immigrants" living in America and constantly bashing it. If you don't like it, go home.
signed wife of someone who immigrated here as a 10 year old who agrees with me
As an immigrant, I agree. I don't think that attitude is really common though, most immigrants I know are happy to be here! The rich "expat" types are the annoying ones I encounter who find everything better back home.
Speak for yourself. What backwater country did you come here from?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a little tired of "non-Americans" or "immigrants" living in America and constantly bashing it. If you don't like it, go home.
signed wife of someone who immigrated here as a 10 year old who agrees with me
As an immigrant, I agree. I don't think that attitude is really common though, most immigrants I know are happy to be here! The rich "expat" types are the annoying ones I encounter who find everything better back home.
Anonymous wrote:I'm an immigrant (came as an adult) and I don't think Americans are lacking in community spirit. In fact, they are more charitable than most, and I have always found people helpful and very kind, warmer. Perhaps lack of connection is perceived because Americans do move more, including far away from family, so there is less stress on grandparent, cousin relations?
Anonymous wrote:When did the U.S. become so individualistic? Only really in the past 50-60 years, right?