Anonymous wrote:Since when? Have I been wrong this entire time? Granted I've never used this term but I thought it meant actual movie night or show marathon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You all are old.
This has no relevance to your lives.
Netflix and chill actually hit its peak last year- the phrase has lessened in popularity this year.
Soothe yourselves with People magazine and Land's End catalogues, don't worry your graying little heads about Netflix and chill.
Should you even be on DCUM during school hours?
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised that a lot of people think the FB post is typical. When I was growing up, there was a clear boundary between parents and children and the two were never friends. Now, it seems that everyone is BFFs with their kids. I don't know if that is a good or a bad thing. I can see pros and cons on both sides of the issue.
Anonymous wrote:You all are old.
This has no relevance to your lives.
Netflix and chill actually hit its peak last year- the phrase has lessened in popularity this year.
Soothe yourselves with People magazine and Land's End catalogues, don't worry your graying little heads about Netflix and chill.
Anonymous wrote:Since when? Have I been wrong this entire time? Granted I've never used this term but I thought it meant actual movie night or show marathon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised that a lot of people think the FB post is typical. When I was growing up, there was a clear boundary between parents and children and the two were never friends. Now, it seems that everyone is BFFs with their kids. I don't know if that is a good or a bad thing. I can see pros and cons on both sides of the issue.
Before facebook posts, parents were leaving these kinds of messages on their kids voicemails, before that it was the answering machine, before that it was letters.
My mother is very much my mother, not my BFF, and we're "friends" on facebook. It's wonderful because now, rather than having to sit down at her table for 3 hours while she shows me pictures she took of rocks on her latest vacation, she just shares the album on facebook, I can comment how great the photos are, and we can spend our time together actually talking rather than me going "Mhmm, yep, that's a pretty rock. That's soooooome rock, Ma!"
I agree re: photo albums, but to your other point, there is a huge difference between parents leaving their kids messages on voicemails, letters, emails, texts and publicly posting it on their FB wall for 500+ friends, family, classmates and co-workers to read. I guess it is a debate between private and public info and most kids these days like everything to be public and open to everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised that a lot of people think the FB post is typical. When I was growing up, there was a clear boundary between parents and children and the two were never friends. Now, it seems that everyone is BFFs with their kids. I don't know if that is a good or a bad thing. I can see pros and cons on both sides of the issue.
Before facebook posts, parents were leaving these kinds of messages on their kids voicemails, before that it was the answering machine, before that it was letters.
My mother is very much my mother, not my BFF, and we're "friends" on facebook. It's wonderful because now, rather than having to sit down at her table for 3 hours while she shows me pictures she took of rocks on her latest vacation, she just shares the album on facebook, I can comment how great the photos are, and we can spend our time together actually talking rather than me going "Mhmm, yep, that's a pretty rock. That's soooooome rock, Ma!"
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised that a lot of people think the FB post is typical. When I was growing up, there was a clear boundary between parents and children and the two were never friends. Now, it seems that everyone is BFFs with their kids. I don't know if that is a good or a bad thing. I can see pros and cons on both sides of the issue.