Anonymous wrote:A high trust homogenous society where they are held to higher standards as individuals.
Anonymous wrote:A high trust homogenous society where they are held to higher standards as individuals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an American who spends time in Stockholm and have observed this too, OP. I also notice a related phenomenon with family dogs when they are taken out in public. Swedish city-dwelling dogs have -excellent- manners and temperament compared to DC dogs — even the same breeds. It’s like they are all highly trained service dogs for the vision impaired. Calm and confident, never leash pulling or inappropriately interested in every stimulus.
With both kids and dogs, a large part of the presentation has to be expectations set at birth. But genetics must have something to do with it because you almost never see crying fussy babies in store or errands, which blows my mind. They’re all calm.
The people are calm too. In a more socialist society where you don't make a lot of $ but you have security of health insurance, free education etc. there is far less striving and stress forUMC families. These are also far smaller spaces, there isn't a lot of private space (large back yards etc) so you are always out in public and other people will correct your kids. Europeans and even more so the Japanese have a very strong culture of not inconveniencing others with their actions.
I agree with this. Work is a little less stressful. Homes are smaller. Health care is covered. Food is fresher. It all adds up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m an American who spends time in Stockholm and have observed this too, OP. I also notice a related phenomenon with family dogs when they are taken out in public. Swedish city-dwelling dogs have -excellent- manners and temperament compared to DC dogs — even the same breeds. It’s like they are all highly trained service dogs for the vision impaired. Calm and confident, never leash pulling or inappropriately interested in every stimulus.
With both kids and dogs, a large part of the presentation has to be expectations set at birth. But genetics must have something to do with it because you almost never see crying fussy babies in store or errands, which blows my mind. They’re all calm.
The people are calm too. In a more socialist society where you don't make a lot of $ but you have security of health insurance, free education etc. there is far less striving and stress forUMC families. These are also far smaller spaces, there isn't a lot of private space (large back yards etc) so you are always out in public and other people will correct your kids. Europeans and even more so the Japanese have a very strong culture of not inconveniencing others with their actions.
Anonymous wrote:I’m American but my father was from Europe. I was raised to be extremely well behaved. My father was very strict and did not tolerate bad behavior, especially not in public. We were taught to sit still, be quiet, not talk loudly, not play with our hair, or touch our clothes, etc. We were also taught to dress appropriately. And from a young age I was taken to the theater, opera, ballet, museums, church, and on occasion nice restaurants where I not only learned how to be in those environments but also practiced good behavior.
Anonymous wrote:If you visit a Restaurant in Italy every single kid from age 0 - 18 sits in front of a screen, if you're lucky, the child is wearing headphones but very often you have to listen to they idiotic game the child is playing.
Signed Eropean
Anonymous wrote:As someone with European family, just, boy. I mean some of my cousins' kids are well behaved but some of them definitely are not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m from one of the groups you mention above, and am raising kids in the US. Many parents I’ve spent time with here just *will not* correct their kids. There’s an enormous spectrum between that and the abuse that the hyperbolic PP above imagines….perhaps just try asking your kids to behave, in a normal voice, and explain to them why. Yes you’ll have to be consistent and ask over several or many occasions. Bc that’s how expectations are set and habits are formed. The TV show on the screen gets a more immediate result but you’ve taught them nothing
+1
When my kids were little we would immediately take them out of a restaurant if they were acting up. And yes that sometimes meant one parent staying back and having food packed up and paying the bill while the other put the screaming kid in the car seat. Did it suck at the time? Absolutely. Do I have well behaved kids now? I sure do. They’re not perfect, but they are very well behaved to their teachers and to us, and we have a pretty calm family now. It took years of hard work, and most American families don’t see that as worth it. And no we were never ever abusive, and we have close relationships with our children. American parents let their kids get away with way too much, they dont even see bad behavior as bad behavior. They see their little child as being creative and expressive. My kids are very expressive and creative, but they do it more calmly. And no, it was not because they’re just easy kids. It’s because we were diligent and consistent and our hard work paid off.
Anonymous wrote:They probably yell at them and borderline abuse them in private. So the kids would never act up.
Then the manners are learned and eventually, there’s no abuse, but they always know deep down they can’t act like a punk.
Contrast US kids who are coddled. I prefer coddled, free and expressive kids.
Anonymous wrote:They probably yell at them and borderline abuse them in private. So the kids would never act up.
Then the manners are learned and eventually, there’s no abuse, but they always know deep down they can’t act like a punk.
Contrast US kids who are coddled. I prefer coddled, free and expressive kids.
Anonymous wrote:I’m from one of the groups you mention above, and am raising kids in the US. Many parents I’ve spent time with here just *will not* correct their kids. There’s an enormous spectrum between that and the abuse that the hyperbolic PP above imagines….perhaps just try asking your kids to behave, in a normal voice, and explain to them why. Yes you’ll have to be consistent and ask over several or many occasions. Bc that’s how expectations are set and habits are formed. The TV show on the screen gets a more immediate result but you’ve taught them nothing
Anonymous wrote:If you visit a Restaurant in Italy every single kid from age 0 - 18 sits in front of a screen, if you're lucky, the child is wearing headphones but very often you have to listen to they idiotic game the child is playing.
Signed Eropean