Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh and one more thing. I'll just leave this here. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/04/style/face-tattoos.html
Post Malone has offered a simpler explanation to reporters for his face tattoos: anything to upset my mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being privileged doesn’t mean anything if there is something fundamentally wrong in the household. When kids act out - regardless of the parents good lucks and wealth - you have to think that there’s something disturbing about their childhood. Could be anything from grandpa is an alcoholic to only the nanny’s took care of me to sexual abuse. We will never know. We will only see the results and that goes for any family.
Anonymous wrote:
https://www.eonline.com/news/1120858/cindy-crawford-s-son-presley-gerber-unveils-dramatic-face-tattoo
He’s all ready for prison now. What a waste of genetics. What is wrong with Cindy and Rande? Their kids - now adults - grew up privileged and are now a hot mess. One tries to look and sound like a street gangster, the other is vacant and anorexic. I just don’t get it.
I disagree with the bolded statements. Sometimes it has nothing to do with the parents or the upbringing.
So … you think he was BORN this way? Highly doubtful. I have worked for years with troubled and high risk kids. In the argument of nature versus nurture, I have yet to see a troubled or high risk child where the problem stemmed from nature. Certainly some of this young man's nature is exerting its influence but his parents had a responsibility to see and respond to this child's specific needs, and they failed in a very obvious way as he is demonstrating.
+1
These situations are easier to understand if you take "parenting" and view it as a separate skill set that people either have or don't have, whether or not the parents are kind/productive/whatever in other aspects of their lives.
Do you guys also blame parents when their kids commit suicide? Maybe you should spend some time with the many parents who spend years desperately trying to find hell for their kids’ mental heath issue. Therapy, medication, love, discipline, boundaries.....sometimes all of that only mitigates the problem, not cure it. I don’t know what’s going on with this kid or his parents.
Suicide is a separate issue. And sometimes, yes, it is a result of parenting or lack there of. Not every parent of a suicide victim was doing everything you listed to help their child.
+1 I am the "BORN" poster. I agree with the poster above. I will go further to say that in my work I have never seen a child BORN predisposed to commit suicide, this includes children who are depressed or suffer from depression.
PP, do you even have kids? Depression is a biological condition. There absolutely a genetic component to it. You sound like an arrogant, sanctimonious jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprise Randy did not push for college for his kids. He is a University of Arizona graduate.
Net worth of Randy is estimated at 300 million due to the tequila business.
You cannot force a kid to go to college. All these moms of toddlers and elementary schoolers (and I bet some of the posters here don't even have kids or their kids are adults) are on here pontificating about how these parents must be "bad". Are you kidding me?
Just wait until your kid hits his/her teens you'll hopefully have more of a reality check about how much control that you have over a rebellious child's actions.
My kids are adults. My daughter has multiple tattoos, has a great job and a great life and is a great daughter. My son has no tattoos. They are both in their 40s. Their dad had one stupid tattoo that he got when he was 18 in the Navy over in Japan and very drunk, he always regretted it and told them that. I have no tattoos. I do not view my daughter's tattoos and any reflection on me or her upbringing whatsoever. She is her own person, has always been strong and independent and stubborn and creative and awesome.
And whoever on this forum thinks calling someone "grandma" is an insult is in for a rude awakening at some point in their lives (if they are lucky enough to actually be a grandma, that is) so maybe give it a rest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprise Randy did not push for college for his kids. He is a University of Arizona graduate.
Net worth of Randy is estimated at 300 million due to the tequila business.
You cannot force a kid to go to college. All these moms of toddlers and elementary schoolers (and I bet some of the posters here don't even have kids or their kids are adults) are on here pontificating about how these parents must be "bad". Are you kidding me?
Just wait until your kid hits his/her teens you'll hopefully have more of a reality check about how much control that you have over a rebellious child's actions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being privileged doesn’t mean anything if there is something fundamentally wrong in the household. When kids act out - regardless of the parents good lucks and wealth - you have to think that there’s something disturbing about their childhood. Could be anything from grandpa is an alcoholic to only the nanny’s took care of me to sexual abuse. We will never know. We will only see the results and that goes for any family.
Anonymous wrote:
https://www.eonline.com/news/1120858/cindy-crawford-s-son-presley-gerber-unveils-dramatic-face-tattoo
He’s all ready for prison now. What a waste of genetics. What is wrong with Cindy and Rande? Their kids - now adults - grew up privileged and are now a hot mess. One tries to look and sound like a street gangster, the other is vacant and anorexic. I just don’t get it.
I disagree with the bolded statements. Sometimes it has nothing to do with the parents or the upbringing.
So … you think he was BORN this way? Highly doubtful. I have worked for years with troubled and high risk kids. In the argument of nature versus nurture, I have yet to see a troubled or high risk child where the problem stemmed from nature. Certainly some of this young man's nature is exerting its influence but his parents had a responsibility to see and respond to this child's specific needs, and they failed in a very obvious way as he is demonstrating.
+1
These situations are easier to understand if you take "parenting" and view it as a separate skill set that people either have or don't have, whether or not the parents are kind/productive/whatever in other aspects of their lives.
Do you guys also blame parents when their kids commit suicide? Maybe you should spend some time with the many parents who spend years desperately trying to find hell for their kids’ mental heath issue. Therapy, medication, love, discipline, boundaries.....sometimes all of that only mitigates the problem, not cure it. I don’t know what’s going on with this kid or his parents.
Suicide is a separate issue. And sometimes, yes, it is a result of parenting or lack there of. Not every parent of a suicide victim was doing everything you listed to help their child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Being privileged doesn’t mean anything if there is something fundamentally wrong in the household. When kids act out - regardless of the parents good lucks and wealth - you have to think that there’s something disturbing about their childhood. Could be anything from grandpa is an alcoholic to only the nanny’s took care of me to sexual abuse. We will never know. We will only see the results and that goes for any family.
Anonymous wrote:
https://www.eonline.com/news/1120858/cindy-crawford-s-son-presley-gerber-unveils-dramatic-face-tattoo
He’s all ready for prison now. What a waste of genetics. What is wrong with Cindy and Rande? Their kids - now adults - grew up privileged and are now a hot mess. One tries to look and sound like a street gangster, the other is vacant and anorexic. I just don’t get it.
I disagree with the bolded statements. Sometimes it has nothing to do with the parents or the upbringing.
So … you think he was BORN this way? Highly doubtful. I have worked for years with troubled and high risk kids. In the argument of nature versus nurture, I have yet to see a troubled or high risk child where the problem stemmed from nature. Certainly some of this young man's nature is exerting its influence but his parents had a responsibility to see and respond to this child's specific needs, and they failed in a very obvious way as he is demonstrating.
+1
These situations are easier to understand if you take "parenting" and view it as a separate skill set that people either have or don't have, whether or not the parents are kind/productive/whatever in other aspects of their lives.
Do you guys also blame parents when their kids commit suicide? Maybe you should spend some time with the many parents who spend years desperately trying to find hell for their kids’ mental heath issue. Therapy, medication, love, discipline, boundaries.....sometimes all of that only mitigates the problem, not cure it. I don’t know what’s going on with this kid or his parents.
Suicide is a separate issue. And sometimes, yes, it is a result of parenting or lack there of. Not every parent of a suicide victim was doing everything you listed to help their child.
+1 I am the "BORN" poster. I agree with the poster above. I will go further to say that in my work I have never seen a child BORN predisposed to commit suicide, this includes children who are depressed or suffer from depression.
Anonymous wrote:Stupid rich kid who is a no good punk thug. I don’t feel bad for idiot parents who don’t take care of their kids who grow up to be drug addicted thugs.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprise Randy did not push for college for his kids. He is a University of Arizona graduate.
Net worth of Randy is estimated at 300 million due to the tequila business.
Anonymous wrote:Oh and one more thing. I'll just leave this here. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/04/style/face-tattoos.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are completely overreacting. Face tattoos are becoming very trendy.
So how long are you out on parole?
Trendy if you want to work as a : server in a restaurant (and only some restaurants), work as a mower on a landscapers crew, work as a bartender (and only at some
places), own your own business and your business does not involve much interaction with the public, work construction (but only some types of positions),
work as a pastor (of your independant church), work as a rock star, work for a rock star etc, etc, etc
Face tatoos are heavily linked to prison culture (same as finger tatoos.) and thus still limit employment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are completely overreacting. Face tattoos are becoming very trendy.
So how long are you out on parole?
Trendy if you want to work as a : server in a restaurant (and only some restaurants), work as a mower on a landscapers crew, work as a bartender (and only at some
places), own your own business and your business does not involve much interaction with the public, work construction (but only some types of positions),
work as a pastor (of your independant church), work as a rock star, work for a rock star etc, etc, etc
Face tatoos are heavily linked to prison culture (same as finger tatoos.) and thus still limit employment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You people are completely overreacting. Face tattoos are becoming very trendy.
So how long are you out on parole?
Anonymous wrote:Wait I thought Tom Hanks’s son is a working actor?