Anonymous wrote:Beneath the cheery surface, there is a tremendous amount of fighting over/stressing over money in Mormon families, even *seemingly* affluent ones. You have a culture where women are encouraged not to work and stay home and couples are encouraged to have a lot of kids at an early age. That means that a Mormon man is often supporting a family of 5+ in his 20s and many struggle to do so. But even if they're struggling and fight a lot about money, they'll pretend to have it together.
That's also why so many women are so susceptible to the lure of MLMs which promise them that they don't have to work outside the home but they can make money to help out.
Anonymous wrote:\Anonymous wrote:Who are these adults who think other people have “perfect” lives based on shallow externalities? This kind of thinking is what I’d expect of an eighth grader. No one’s life is perfect, even a blond haired, blue eyed, Mormon mommy blogger. All you’re seeing is a facade.
Mormon women have an extraordinarily high rate of depression compared to everyone else.
https://universe.byu.edu/2018/02/05/mental-illness-1/
\Anonymous wrote:Who are these adults who think other people have “perfect” lives based on shallow externalities? This kind of thinking is what I’d expect of an eighth grader. No one’s life is perfect, even a blond haired, blue eyed, Mormon mommy blogger. All you’re seeing is a facade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these adults who think other people have “perfect” lives based on shallow externalities? This kind of thinking is what I’d expect of an eighth grader. No one’s life is perfect, even a blond haired, blue eyed, Mormon mommy blogger. All you’re seeing is a facade.
I mean I'm sure there's hidden issues but by and large they have happy marriages, kids, careers and their kids seem to turn out well.
Don't mormon women have an incredibly high rate of prescription pain med us?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these adults who think other people have “perfect” lives based on shallow externalities? This kind of thinking is what I’d expect of an eighth grader. No one’s life is perfect, even a blond haired, blue eyed, Mormon mommy blogger. All you’re seeing is a facade.
I mean I'm sure there's hidden issues but by and large they have happy marriages, kids, careers and their kids seem to turn out well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these adults who think other people have “perfect” lives based on shallow externalities? This kind of thinking is what I’d expect of an eighth grader. No one’s life is perfect, even a blond haired, blue eyed, Mormon mommy blogger. All you’re seeing is a facade.
I mean I'm sure there's hidden issues but by and large they have happy marriages, kids, careers and their kids seem to turn out well.
Anonymous wrote:Who are these adults who think other people have “perfect” lives based on shallow externalities? This kind of thinking is what I’d expect of an eighth grader. No one’s life is perfect, even a blond haired, blue eyed, Mormon mommy blogger. All you’re seeing is a facade.
Anonymous wrote:Fun fact about Mormons and Ashkenazi Jews:
Leta Hollingworth did research into IQ in early 1900s. (This later turned into the Stanford ability project). She was particularly interested in kids above 180 IQ.
In fact, she wrote a book called Children Above 180 IQ. They found the highest incidence of geniuses among Mormons and Ashkenazi Jews - and similar average IQs in these groups.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I felt this way when I spent a week with a friend who is an Orthodox Jew. I loved the emphasis on family, resting and reflecting and not using any electricity (or electronics) on the Sabbath as opposed to running around like a maniac, having other religious neighbors over and really feeling like a community. I think covid is making everyone a little lonely and craving community again, and that's a role that religion feels. I'm a terrible rule follower and there are a lot of rules that bother me in every religion, so I wouldn't be able to pull it off, but it's a good sign that we should slow down a bit and focus on neighbors, relatives, friends, the simple things. It also gives a sense of order when the world is in chaos. I bet a lot of people turn to religion when this is over, or even now.
Interesting: when I was in college I knew many Mormons who were friends and housemates with Orthodox Jews. The Mormons helped the Jews with stuff on Saturdays and the Jews handled things on campus for the Mormons while the Mormons went on their missions.
Anonymous wrote:I felt this way when I spent a week with a friend who is an Orthodox Jew. I loved the emphasis on family, resting and reflecting and not using any electricity (or electronics) on the Sabbath as opposed to running around like a maniac, having other religious neighbors over and really feeling like a community. I think covid is making everyone a little lonely and craving community again, and that's a role that religion feels. I'm a terrible rule follower and there are a lot of rules that bother me in every religion, so I wouldn't be able to pull it off, but it's a good sign that we should slow down a bit and focus on neighbors, relatives, friends, the simple things. It also gives a sense of order when the world is in chaos. I bet a lot of people turn to religion when this is over, or even now.