Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what’s stopping you op? And how old your kids are? How do you envision 90’s childhood for your kids? No electronics? 1 hour per week? Outdoor time? Also, why 90s? Cause that when you were a child? Did you grow up in DC in the 1990s or somewhere else? Could it be that what you refer as childhood in 1990s could actually be childhood in a different location?
Not the op, but the 90s were the last time kids got to have more of a free childhood. Maybe into the very early 2000s, but after that fear and paranoia took over. Kids aren't allowed out unsupervised anymore or have free time. Screens are way more prevalent and so are organized activities. Yes, we had those things in the 90s, but imo, kids had a way better balance.
Into the early 2000s? Nope it ended in the mid 90s
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So what’s stopping you op? And how old your kids are? How do you envision 90’s childhood for your kids? No electronics? 1 hour per week? Outdoor time? Also, why 90s? Cause that when you were a child? Did you grow up in DC in the 1990s or somewhere else? Could it be that what you refer as childhood in 1990s could actually be childhood in a different location?
Not the op, but the 90s were the last time kids got to have more of a free childhood. Maybe into the very early 2000s, but after that fear and paranoia took over. Kids aren't allowed out unsupervised anymore or have free time. Screens are way more prevalent and so are organized activities. Yes, we had those things in the 90s, but imo, kids had a way better balance.
Anonymous wrote:So what’s stopping you op? And how old your kids are? How do you envision 90’s childhood for your kids? No electronics? 1 hour per week? Outdoor time? Also, why 90s? Cause that when you were a child? Did you grow up in DC in the 1990s or somewhere else? Could it be that what you refer as childhood in 1990s could actually be childhood in a different location?
Anonymous wrote:You are overthinking this and romantizing the 90s.
Get nostalgic watching Barney or Saved by the Bell reruns, but it won't translate to kids now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90s had tv and video games, sports and all that.
I was born in the 70s and I remember my nieces and nephews born in the 90s spending basically their entire teen years with their game console glued to their hand, or on their computer gaming. I remember being seriously worried about them but they are actually now all productive adults with spouses and kids and reasonable tech usage.
Anonymous wrote:90s had tv and video games, sports and all that.
Anonymous wrote:Running around when my parents have no clue where I was, finding beer at the creek, being hit on by creepy men as I rode my bike, molested by my uncle while no adults paid attention to us. No thanks.