1dalm@lemmy.today to Parenting@lemmy.world · 2 months agoLittle secret you weren't taught: Parenting as a concept basically didn't exist before the 1970s. The overwhelming job that we call "parenting" used to be a community effort.locklemmy.todayimagemessage-square27linkfedilinkarrow-up18arrow-down123
arrow-up1-15arrow-down1imageLittle secret you weren't taught: Parenting as a concept basically didn't exist before the 1970s. The overwhelming job that we call "parenting" used to be a community effort.locklemmy.today1dalm@lemmy.today to Parenting@lemmy.world · 2 months agomessage-square27linkfedilink
minus-squaregivesomefucks@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3·2 months agoIf you’re going to draw that line, draw it in the 20teens when parents started to get in legal trouble for their kids being unaccompanied. But again, even just the “free range” nature is a very very small aspect of parenting. Like, to compare to today’s kids, being let lose on a small town as a preteen is nothing compared to unsupervised Internet access. In a lot of respects, kids have a shit ton more freedom/privacy than pre-internet kids. Hell, I remember having to take jr high dating calls from the kitchen phone in front of my whole family. You’re thinking what was important to you as a kid, is important to kids today. Let them pick between a cell phone and closed bedroom door or a park with their friends but no phones… You might be surprised, most people won’t.
minus-square1dalm@lemmy.todayOPlinkfedilinkarrow-up1arrow-down1·2 months agoWe are probably going to disagree on cellphone access being better for the kids.
minus-squareOnomatopoeia@lemmy.cafelinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up3·2 months agoI think you missed the point.
minus-squaregivesomefucks@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up2·2 months agoNo we agree, you just don’t understand. Unrestricted cell phone use is worse, so they have more freedom and are taking more risk than your grandparents. That’s why they wouldn’t trade in house privacy with a phone for a public environment with peers but no phones. It’s not “good” that they have that freedom, but it’s undeniably freedoom, and more than any prior generation has had
If you’re going to draw that line, draw it in the 20teens when parents started to get in legal trouble for their kids being unaccompanied.
But again, even just the “free range” nature is a very very small aspect of parenting.
Like, to compare to today’s kids, being let lose on a small town as a preteen is nothing compared to unsupervised Internet access.
In a lot of respects, kids have a shit ton more freedom/privacy than pre-internet kids.
Hell, I remember having to take jr high dating calls from the kitchen phone in front of my whole family.
You’re thinking what was important to you as a kid, is important to kids today.
Let them pick between a cell phone and closed bedroom door or a park with their friends but no phones…
You might be surprised, most people won’t.
We are probably going to disagree on cellphone access being better for the kids.
I think you missed the point.
No we agree, you just don’t understand.
Unrestricted cell phone use is worse, so they have more freedom and are taking more risk than your grandparents.
That’s why they wouldn’t trade in house privacy with a phone for a public environment with peers but no phones.
It’s not “good” that they have that freedom, but it’s undeniably freedoom, and more than any prior generation has had