Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a thing young adults are all doing now - analyzing their childhoods with a focus on all the ways their parents were not perfect. They have no idea what it's like to try to raise children, and the choices we have to make. It's our job to make sure they have what they need to be successful, and there is no instruction manual to follow to make that happen. You did your best. You can certainly try to tweak your parenting to avoid putting so much pressure on the younger siblings, but you should not feel awful. Your kid went to an Ivy. Some of the rest of us are feeling awful because our kids can barely get into a state school.
Yes, parents want their kids to be successful, do well in school, good grades, college ect. And hopefully become successful adults, but you don't have to steal their childhoods for that.
Please provide a link to the instruction manual entitled "How to raise successful children without stealing their childhood," and also a link to the one that provides the precise criteria for "stealing their childhood" versus "parenting." I would like to see that data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The belt wacko is nuts
Or perhaps I just have a different perspective than you. You should open your mind a little.
No, there is no "opening your mind" to abuse. Sure, I believe you love your parents but beating you with a belt should not have happened nor should you act like it's acceptable (then or now).
So is spanking with a bare hand "acceptable"? Some people consider spanking to be beating, and others do not. What if this kid got spanked by his parents? He might think it is abuse. He might think it deserves the label of "beating." But others might think it so. Whatever it is... I am just saying that he should quit whining about it and choose to live a happy life. I chose to do so, despite being "beaten" by my parents occasionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The belt wacko is nuts
Or perhaps I just have a different perspective than you. You should open your mind a little.
No, there is no "opening your mind" to abuse. Sure, I believe you love your parents but beating you with a belt should not have happened nor should you act like it's acceptable (then or now).
Not the PP - where did beating with a belt enter the chat? I missed that part. I thought we were just talking about classic tiger mom parenting, with a lot of pressure to excel academically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The belt wacko is nuts
Or perhaps I just have a different perspective than you. You should open your mind a little.
No, there is no "opening your mind" to abuse. Sure, I believe you love your parents but beating you with a belt should not have happened nor should you act like it's acceptable (then or now).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He shouldn’t have started the video talking about the art and piano classes, they were weak examples. Thats normal parenting when you kids are interested in something. All the academic pressures and all free time being dedicated to getting ahead academically is messed up though.
I think you missed the point. He shared his experience with the art and piano classes to help viewers understand that he was never allowed to do something just for fun or to meet new friends with similar interests. Every single thing he did involved formal instruction and, most importantly, competitions. He was never allowed just to learn or develop new skills; he had to master everything he tried and then demonstrate that he was the best. It wasn’t enough to do well. He had to dominate the competition or feel like a disappointment to his parents. They sucked the joy out of everything — art, piano, school, even being successful. He was a puppet and they pulled the strings.
He admits that this kind of parenting often leads to high achievement and success, but he wants people to know that it doesn’t work for every child. It made him beyond stressed, to the point of physical illness. It prevented him from developing social skills through typical interactions with peers. He has no happy childhood memories. There’s no activity that he loves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The belt wacko is nuts
Or perhaps I just have a different perspective than you. You should open your mind a little.
No, there is no "opening your mind" to abuse. Sure, I believe you love your parents but beating you with a belt should not have happened nor should you act like it's acceptable (then or now).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a thing young adults are all doing now - analyzing their childhoods with a focus on all the ways their parents were not perfect. They have no idea what it's like to try to raise children, and the choices we have to make. It's our job to make sure they have what they need to be successful, and there is no instruction manual to follow to make that happen. You did your best. You can certainly try to tweak your parenting to avoid putting so much pressure on the younger siblings, but you should not feel awful. Your kid went to an Ivy. Some of the rest of us are feeling awful because our kids can barely get into a state school.
Yes, parents want their kids to be successful, do well in school, good grades, college ect. And hopefully become successful adults, but you don't have to steal their childhoods for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a thing young adults are all doing now - analyzing their childhoods with a focus on all the ways their parents were not perfect. They have no idea what it's like to try to raise children, and the choices we have to make. It's our job to make sure they have what they need to be successful, and there is no instruction manual to follow to make that happen. You did your best. You can certainly try to tweak your parenting to avoid putting so much pressure on the younger siblings, but you should not feel awful. Your kid went to an Ivy. Some of the rest of us are feeling awful because our kids can barely get into a state school.
Yes, parents want their kids to be successful, do well in school, good grades, college ect. And hopefully become successful adults, but you don't have to steal their childhoods for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The belt wacko is nuts
Or perhaps I just have a different perspective than you. You should open your mind a little.
Anonymous wrote:This is a thing young adults are all doing now - analyzing their childhoods with a focus on all the ways their parents were not perfect. They have no idea what it's like to try to raise children, and the choices we have to make. It's our job to make sure they have what they need to be successful, and there is no instruction manual to follow to make that happen. You did your best. You can certainly try to tweak your parenting to avoid putting so much pressure on the younger siblings, but you should not feel awful. Your kid went to an Ivy. Some of the rest of us are feeling awful because our kids can barely get into a state school.
Anonymous wrote:This is a thing young adults are all doing now - analyzing their childhoods with a focus on all the ways their parents were not perfect. They have no idea what it's like to try to raise children, and the choices we have to make. It's our job to make sure they have what they need to be successful, and there is no instruction manual to follow to make that happen. You did your best. You can certainly try to tweak your parenting to avoid putting so much pressure on the younger siblings, but you should not feel awful. Your kid went to an Ivy. Some of the rest of us are feeling awful because our kids can barely get into a state school.
Anonymous wrote:The belt wacko is nuts