Showing posts sorted by relevance for query dukes of hazzard. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query dukes of hazzard. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

What's Wrong With Motherhood?

From Instapundit:
IN THE MAIL: Caitlin Flanagan's new book, To Hell with All That : Loving and Loathing Our Inner Housewife. I'm at something of a loss to see why so many lefties hate her so much. But what struck me in reading the book, with its comparison of housekeeping and childrearing from 30 years ago with the same today is how much harder people have made both.

We keep hearing about declining birthrates, but raising a kid is far more expensive -- financially, emotionally, and in terms of time -- today than it was a few decades ago. As she occasionally notes, things that were considered adequate, or even examplary, parenting then are now considered abuse or neglect. In fact, when you look at how the burden of childrearing has increased, it seems amazing that we see as many people having children as we do.

Society would be a lot better off (emotionally and demographically) if it would cut parents more slack on this stuff, though as she notes, much of the pressure is the result of competitiveness among parents, particularly mothers.

As evidence that kids can turn out fine despite all sorts of parenting - and as evidence that the latest fads and pronouncements of experts are often bunk -- Flanagan's book should be read together with James Lileks' Mommy Knows Worst : Highlights from the Golden Age of Bad Parenting Advice. Happily, Amazon recommends the two together, a recommendation that, if followed, may do more to improve American society than many government programs.
I wonder why the shift in societal pressure and increased burden of parenthood? I certainly know many people who run themselves frantic trying to look after their kids, run them to every activity under the sun, and putting themselves under undo stress trying not to fail their children in any way. I know they all do it out of sincere love and devotion for their kids, but I often wonder if it's really what's best for their children or for them?
"[M]uch of the advice from the parenting experts is flapdoodle. But surely the advice is grounded in research on children's development? Yes, from the many useless studies that show a correlation between the behavior of parents and the behavior of their biological children and conclude that parenting shapes the child, as if there were no such thing as heredity."
--Steven Pinker, "The Blank Slate"
My parents might tell a different story, but I don't remember my life as a child being anywhere near as frantic and "on the go" as families are today. My memories are of growing up in a loving home -- at home. Climbing the tree in the backyard, catching salamanders in the creek, riding my bike with the neighborhood kids, playing with Star Wars action figures, eating popcorn and watching the "Dukes of Hazzard" on Friday nights together as a family, etc. When I was really young, we'd even go on family tractor rides together -- we'd hitch the trailer to the back and Dad would pull Mom, Kevin and me around the yard. Life wasn't a flurry of activity, but it sure was fun! I will always look back to this with very fond memories.



I remember Mom being home to take care of all our boos-boos while Dad went off to slay the dragons to put meat on the table. Both of these things made me feel very secure and very well loved. Mom and Dad were a team and I knew they loved each other and that they loved me. The joy I remember had nothing to do with how many activities we could cram into a day, but rather the time we spent together as a family. There's no "parenting technique" that is better than that!

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Friday, January 08, 2010

Born at the Right Time

happy baby A thoughtful post by Tynan:

Maybe everyone else also feels as though their generation is especially blessed, but I can’t help but think that mine really got the best deal around. In the less than 30 years I’ve been around, I’ve seen the invention of the cell phone, the computer, and the internet. Better than just witnessing it, these things came out when I was a curious teenager with a lot of free time to tinker.

The best part, though, is that none of these things were around when I was really young. I wasn’t allowed to watch TV, so I spent most of my childhood outdoors. Society wasn’t quite so skittish about, well, everything, so my friends, siblings, and I had free run of the neighborhood, which bordered a state park. I could call my friends (on landlines, of course), and go meet them at our fort in the woods, without even needing parental approval. We built things, raced around, and used our imaginations. In the winter we went into the woods to find the biggest hill and make jumps on it. In the summer we made fishing poles out of sticks and dug for worms to impale on the hooks we found near the water’s edge.

I’m not sure that kind of childhood really exists anymore. I know all too well how easy it is to get sucked into the internet and live vicariously rather than actively. Parents are so scared of everything that when I set my kids loose in the neighborhood, they might not have anyone to play with.

Maybe older generations would say the same thing about when they were kids. They certainly do tend to think of “back then” as some sort of golden age. Maybe kids now think feel like they’ve got it great. One thing is certain though: we live in a great time and it will never be like this again. Let’s enjoy it.

We truly do live in a time of tremendous change – both socially and technologically.  Like Tyran, I too am thankful for when I was born and the changes I have seen.  As I once wrote:

bobafett I don't remember my life as a child being anywhere near as frantic and "on the go" as families are today. My memories are of growing up in a loving home -- at home. Climbing the tree in the backyard, catching salamanders in the creek, riding my bike with the neighborhood kids, playing with Star Wars action figures, eating popcorn and watching the "Dukes of Hazzard" on Friday nights together as a family, etc. When I was really young, we'd even go on family tractor rides together -- we'd hitch the trailer to the back and Dad would pull Mom, Kevin and me around the yard. Life wasn't a flurry of activity, but it sure was fun! I will always look back to this with very fond memories.

I too feel blessed to have lived in a time with a childhood where I was free to play and run outdoors and in a time when my adulthood is surrounded by tremendous technological change.  I am also thankful to have lived in a time where I had the chance to travel to much of the world before before airport security became so intrusive and so insane.

Like Trynan said, we live in a wonderful time and it won’t be like this again.  Enjoy it!

Monday, December 10, 2007

TelevisionTunes.com

Last night, I listened to a few theme songs from TV shows I watched as a kid and really took a stroll down memory lane.
Welcome to TelevisionTunes.com! Here you will find tonnes of TV theme music and songs from yesterday and today.

Browse our huge archive of 3,589 theme songs using the index above or below. All of the theme music is in MP3 format. If you can't find a theme song, contact me and I'll try to get it for you.
Here are a few classics to get you started. Follow the link for many, many more.
(HT Joe Carter)