degredation of society
TEXSRT4
02-12-2005, 12:39 PM
woa is the generation who does not strive to protect the innocents of their youth. for they have become an abomination, no longer fit to be called human. they have degraded into less than even the beasts of the fields. how corrupt have we become that our children are not our first priority, but instead just another drain on society waiting to be filled in. filled with the disgustingness of humanity and the unholy degredation that comes from the way we treat one another. let the children play, let them think, let them learn, but dont show them the evil that is humanity. they will have time to absorb the corruption when they mature, but let them hold fast to their innocents for as long as possiable. for that is what makes children themselves
dirtydx
02-12-2005, 04:05 PM
do you have a solution? or just the complaint.
until then your a beast in the field just like me. LOL :lol2:
until then your a beast in the field just like me. LOL :lol2:
sivic02
02-12-2005, 05:35 PM
Heres my vote for the solution...
http://art-bin.com/art/omodest.html
http://art-bin.com/art/omodest.html
DGB454
02-12-2005, 07:27 PM
Well I liked it.:thumbsup:
2strokebloke
02-12-2005, 10:28 PM
Uh - degradation? 80 years ago our children would have been working in coal mines, and be lucky if they were literate.
Humanity is bad? geeze go figure that showing a little humanity towards one another would be so bad. Perhaps if people in other countries would treat children as humans and not slaves or soldiers, we'd all be better off.
Humanity is bad? geeze go figure that showing a little humanity towards one another would be so bad. Perhaps if people in other countries would treat children as humans and not slaves or soldiers, we'd all be better off.
sivic02
02-12-2005, 10:30 PM
I still say we eat the babies...whos with me!
TEXSRT4
02-12-2005, 11:15 PM
degradation yes!!! working hard does not infact lead to corruption, it leads to character development. instead, what fuels this disease is the acceptablility of violence, sexuallity, and relativism as social norms. we not only allow it, but encourage it - and it is that fact that instills fear in the deepest corner of my heart. humanity dwindles in the coming generations
TexasF355F1
02-12-2005, 11:53 PM
Man, I think you have some issues you need to deal with. If you look back in history then follow it forward, everything has been going down hill in a way, but at the same time things are better. I(and I think the rest of us) am really having a problem trying to understand what exactly you are trying to say. Try and enjoy life a little bit.
2strokebloke
02-12-2005, 11:59 PM
degradation yes!!! working hard does not infact lead to corruption, it leads to character development.
So long as you're not suggesting that working in dangerous conditions until your internal organs fail is a good way to build character - I'll agree.
instead, what fuels this disease is the acceptablility of violence, sexuallity, and relativism as social norms. we not only allow it, but encourage it
Who's encouraging it? Certainly not any more people than are against it.
- and it is that fact that instills fear in the deepest corner of my heart. humanity dwindles in the coming generations
I think you're being pessimistic for no good reason. If you only want to focus on what's bad - everything seems bad.
So long as you're not suggesting that working in dangerous conditions until your internal organs fail is a good way to build character - I'll agree.
instead, what fuels this disease is the acceptablility of violence, sexuallity, and relativism as social norms. we not only allow it, but encourage it
Who's encouraging it? Certainly not any more people than are against it.
- and it is that fact that instills fear in the deepest corner of my heart. humanity dwindles in the coming generations
I think you're being pessimistic for no good reason. If you only want to focus on what's bad - everything seems bad.
TEXSRT4
02-13-2005, 12:17 AM
i in no way shape or form need to lighten up. i have an amazing life, and have no real problems. the issue i have has been realised through my work with elementary - highschool students. i have been watching a constant decline in morals. but what really bothers me is this. we had a discussion in a class i was attending the other day. this discussion was about teh teaching of children. these people believed that it was acceptable to not protect their children from the world around them. they thought it wasnt nessesary to watch or observe our youth. this pushed me over the edge! im normally a very easy going person, with very few issues in life. but when you take advantage of our most precious resources, that is where i draw the line
2strokebloke
02-13-2005, 12:26 AM
Hmmm, that's disturbing.
In school I always felt like school was really stupid for setting it's students up so poorly for the real world. Sheltering them, and hiding them from them from what is real.
I wouldn't say that we shouldn't watch out for the youth, but for the love of pie - don't hide them from everything. Don't force them to live in a world that isn't real. Let them learn through interaction, let them figure stuff out.
Life is not worksheets and tests - that is cruelty that is being unfair to the children, that is setting them up for life as machine, they may as well be a computer reading punch cards and retrieving information from their memory banks.
I hope my children never have to face such degrading and humiliating "education" in their lives.
In school I always felt like school was really stupid for setting it's students up so poorly for the real world. Sheltering them, and hiding them from them from what is real.
I wouldn't say that we shouldn't watch out for the youth, but for the love of pie - don't hide them from everything. Don't force them to live in a world that isn't real. Let them learn through interaction, let them figure stuff out.
Life is not worksheets and tests - that is cruelty that is being unfair to the children, that is setting them up for life as machine, they may as well be a computer reading punch cards and retrieving information from their memory banks.
I hope my children never have to face such degrading and humiliating "education" in their lives.
TexasF355F1
02-13-2005, 02:01 AM
Hmmm, that's disturbing.
In school I always felt like school was really stupid for setting it's students up so poorly for the real world. Sheltering them, and hiding them from them from what is real.
I wouldn't say that we shouldn't watch out for the youth, but for the love of pie - don't hide them from everything. Don't force them to live in a world that isn't real. Let them learn through interaction, let them figure stuff out.
Life is not worksheets and tests - that is cruelty that is being unfair to the children, that is setting them up for life as machine, they may as well be a computer reading punch cards and retrieving information from their memory banks.
I hope my children never have to face such degrading and humiliating "education" in their lives.
I agree. Having gone to school with a very diverse group since pre-school, I have seen just about everytype of person there is. Don't take that too literally b/c no one is the same. Anyways, I have witnessed drug deals in school, witnessed a gun going off in class(accidental, but bad nonetheless bad), been friends with gang members, been harassed(only once or twice b/c I was friends with most everyone). I could go on and on.
My point is, that witnessing and being around all of these different situations could have changed me for the worse. But its my parents that brought me up to have good morals and respect people. But none of what was taught by my parents was enforced. It was myself that had to learn what I view as right and wrong, moral and immoral.
A lot has to do with the environment in which we grow up around. Just b/c some people are gang members or sell drugs or do drugs doesnt necessarily make them bad people. It may take a bad experience to make someone realize what they're doing is wrong. Some never learn, but many do. It's those that do, that usually end up trying to make changes for the best and teach others what not to do and view them as an example.
As for education side of things. Many people see education as the most important thing there is in the world. I am one that doesnt. I do think that everyone and I mean everyone needs to graduate from high school. Its the persons choice afterwards whether or not to achieve a high education. Just b/c they don't doesnt make things bad, college just isn't for everyone. The things I see as far more important than education is family and friends. Without family and friends, a person really has nothing. No one to love, no one to care for, no one to care for them etc. Love and care is what this society needs to help smooth along the process.
This world is full of bad people and bad things. But there are far more good people in this world than we can see or even acknowledge. It's the negativity that the mediums show and tell us. You have to teach kids to look beyond the bad and try and find the good.
In school I always felt like school was really stupid for setting it's students up so poorly for the real world. Sheltering them, and hiding them from them from what is real.
I wouldn't say that we shouldn't watch out for the youth, but for the love of pie - don't hide them from everything. Don't force them to live in a world that isn't real. Let them learn through interaction, let them figure stuff out.
Life is not worksheets and tests - that is cruelty that is being unfair to the children, that is setting them up for life as machine, they may as well be a computer reading punch cards and retrieving information from their memory banks.
I hope my children never have to face such degrading and humiliating "education" in their lives.
I agree. Having gone to school with a very diverse group since pre-school, I have seen just about everytype of person there is. Don't take that too literally b/c no one is the same. Anyways, I have witnessed drug deals in school, witnessed a gun going off in class(accidental, but bad nonetheless bad), been friends with gang members, been harassed(only once or twice b/c I was friends with most everyone). I could go on and on.
My point is, that witnessing and being around all of these different situations could have changed me for the worse. But its my parents that brought me up to have good morals and respect people. But none of what was taught by my parents was enforced. It was myself that had to learn what I view as right and wrong, moral and immoral.
A lot has to do with the environment in which we grow up around. Just b/c some people are gang members or sell drugs or do drugs doesnt necessarily make them bad people. It may take a bad experience to make someone realize what they're doing is wrong. Some never learn, but many do. It's those that do, that usually end up trying to make changes for the best and teach others what not to do and view them as an example.
As for education side of things. Many people see education as the most important thing there is in the world. I am one that doesnt. I do think that everyone and I mean everyone needs to graduate from high school. Its the persons choice afterwards whether or not to achieve a high education. Just b/c they don't doesnt make things bad, college just isn't for everyone. The things I see as far more important than education is family and friends. Without family and friends, a person really has nothing. No one to love, no one to care for, no one to care for them etc. Love and care is what this society needs to help smooth along the process.
This world is full of bad people and bad things. But there are far more good people in this world than we can see or even acknowledge. It's the negativity that the mediums show and tell us. You have to teach kids to look beyond the bad and try and find the good.
DGB454
02-13-2005, 09:29 AM
Children need the time to be children. They don't need to be forced into the way society is today. When I was a child things were much different than they are today. My 13 year old son is already being preassured into sex, drugs and drinking. This has been going on for 2 years now since he was 11. When I was 11 these weren't the peer preasures I had to face. At 11 you are still a child and shouldn't have to face adult problems and preasures. I live in a small town and chose to live here because I wanted to give my son the same chance at being a kid that I had. That's harder than I would have expected it was going to be. The reason? THe moral values of the world have dropped so low that they are almost unrecognizable as anything I knew as a child or even 10 years ago for that matter.
No you can't shelter your kids from the world but you can give them a chance to be a kid as long as possible. Try and keep certain things away from them until they are mature enough to deal with it.
Forcing them into "the real world" will only stunt them morally. I for one would rather have my son grow up morally sound rather than "real world" wise.
Fortunatly for me I do have a good son who is getting a great education at one of the highest ranked public schools in the state.(all A's too :) )
And he wise enough to (at the moment) be able to say no to those peer preasures. I know this won't last forever but I will help him make it last as long as it can. He is only a child once. He will my child forever. He deserves a chance to become the best adult he can be.
No you can't shelter your kids from the world but you can give them a chance to be a kid as long as possible. Try and keep certain things away from them until they are mature enough to deal with it.
Forcing them into "the real world" will only stunt them morally. I for one would rather have my son grow up morally sound rather than "real world" wise.
Fortunatly for me I do have a good son who is getting a great education at one of the highest ranked public schools in the state.(all A's too :) )
And he wise enough to (at the moment) be able to say no to those peer preasures. I know this won't last forever but I will help him make it last as long as it can. He is only a child once. He will my child forever. He deserves a chance to become the best adult he can be.
TexasF355F1
02-13-2005, 01:13 PM
Children need the time to be children. They don't need to be forced into the way society is today. When I was a child things were much different than they are today. My 13 year old son is already being preassured into sex, drugs and drinking. This has been going on for 2 years now since he was 11. When I was 11 these weren't the peer preasures I had to face. At 11 you are still a child and shouldn't have to face adult problems and preasures. I live in a small town and chose to live here because I wanted to give my son the same chance at being a kid that I had. That's harder than I would have expected it was going to be. The reason? THe moral values of the world have dropped so low that they are almost unrecognizable as anything I knew as a child or even 10 years ago for that matter.
No you can't shelter your kids from the world but you can give them a chance to be a kid as long as possible. Try and keep certain things away from them until they are mature enough to deal with it.
Forcing them into "the real world" will only stunt them morally. I for one would rather have my son grow up morally sound rather than "real world" wise.
Fortunatly for me I do have a good son who is getting a great education at one of the highest ranked public schools in the state.(all A's too :) )
And he wise enough to (at the moment) be able to say no to those peer preasures. I know this won't last forever but I will help him make it last as long as it can. He is only a child once. He will my child forever. He deserves a chance to become the best adult he can be.
It makes you feel good to know your son can chose NOT to do things people try and pressure him to. One thing that I've seen though, is that kids in small towns tend to be far more sexually premiscuious(sp?), drink, and try all sorts of drugs at a far younger age than I have seen. Not to say that things arent different always. But I'm glad your kid has a good head on his shoulders. That says a lot about you as a father. :smile:
Another thing that can have an adverse affect on kids is trying to hide them from alcohol and telling them its bad. The kids I know whose parents did this, started abusing alcohol at an early age. When I was in high school, as long as I told my dad that we were going to have a few beers he was fine with it. Mainly b/c he would do the same things in high school and he knew we weren't driving anywhere, and my friends parents were there and watching us. My dad has praised me for the fact that I dont drink and drive. My dad did it all the time when he was young and got tickets that he would find the next morning and not even remember receiving.
One thing that I did, that I wasn't really pressured to do was drink at school in 7th grade. A buddy of mine brought a beer one day, and he passed it around our little lunch table. He was known to be a trouble maker, but he did not pressure me to drink. I'm the one that said let me have a sip. He even brought a beer for each of us the rest of that week. It was a stupid thing to do. But hell I was growing and learning. I'm just lucky we never got caught.
There's only so much you can shelter you child from. Once they are out the door you can only hope you've raised them good enough to make the right decisions on their own. While I've done things that arent exactly right, I dont deem as very bad from my own set of morals. There are other things I do and dont do that I feel are far more important to maintain within myself to keep me in the right state of mind.
No you can't shelter your kids from the world but you can give them a chance to be a kid as long as possible. Try and keep certain things away from them until they are mature enough to deal with it.
Forcing them into "the real world" will only stunt them morally. I for one would rather have my son grow up morally sound rather than "real world" wise.
Fortunatly for me I do have a good son who is getting a great education at one of the highest ranked public schools in the state.(all A's too :) )
And he wise enough to (at the moment) be able to say no to those peer preasures. I know this won't last forever but I will help him make it last as long as it can. He is only a child once. He will my child forever. He deserves a chance to become the best adult he can be.
It makes you feel good to know your son can chose NOT to do things people try and pressure him to. One thing that I've seen though, is that kids in small towns tend to be far more sexually premiscuious(sp?), drink, and try all sorts of drugs at a far younger age than I have seen. Not to say that things arent different always. But I'm glad your kid has a good head on his shoulders. That says a lot about you as a father. :smile:
Another thing that can have an adverse affect on kids is trying to hide them from alcohol and telling them its bad. The kids I know whose parents did this, started abusing alcohol at an early age. When I was in high school, as long as I told my dad that we were going to have a few beers he was fine with it. Mainly b/c he would do the same things in high school and he knew we weren't driving anywhere, and my friends parents were there and watching us. My dad has praised me for the fact that I dont drink and drive. My dad did it all the time when he was young and got tickets that he would find the next morning and not even remember receiving.
One thing that I did, that I wasn't really pressured to do was drink at school in 7th grade. A buddy of mine brought a beer one day, and he passed it around our little lunch table. He was known to be a trouble maker, but he did not pressure me to drink. I'm the one that said let me have a sip. He even brought a beer for each of us the rest of that week. It was a stupid thing to do. But hell I was growing and learning. I'm just lucky we never got caught.
There's only so much you can shelter you child from. Once they are out the door you can only hope you've raised them good enough to make the right decisions on their own. While I've done things that arent exactly right, I dont deem as very bad from my own set of morals. There are other things I do and dont do that I feel are far more important to maintain within myself to keep me in the right state of mind.
DGB454
02-13-2005, 08:59 PM
It makes you feel good to know your son can chose NOT to do things people try and pressure him to. One thing that I've seen though, is that kids in small towns tend to be far more sexually premiscuious(sp?), drink, and try all sorts of drugs at a far younger age than I have seen.
I agree 100%. I think it's the boredom of the small towns that leads them to experement a little more. That's why we make sure we get to know his friends. We also lead him towards other outside activities after school. We don't force him to do these outside activities but at least try them. Some stick and some don't. It helps him from becoming bored. Our house is usually where him and his freinds end up at when they are looking for a place to hang out. We have tried to create a place where they feel comfortable. I'd rather see them over here where I know what's going on and I continue to be part of their life than somewhere else where I don't know what's going on.
Not to say that things arent different always. But I'm glad your kid has a good head on his shoulders. That says a lot about you as a father.
Thanks. I'm sure in time he will begin to start pulling away but by that time I am hoping he learned enough to make somewhat mature decisions.
Another thing that can have an adverse affect on kids is trying to hide them from alcohol and telling them its bad. The kids I know whose parents did this, started abusing alcohol at an early age. When I was in high school, as long as I told my dad that we were going to have a few beers he was fine with it. Mainly b/c he would do the same things in high school and he knew we weren't driving anywhere, and my friends parents were there and watching us. My dad has praised me for the fact that I dont drink and drive. My dad did it all the time when he was young and got tickets that he would find the next morning and not even remember receiving.
I agree. You can't stifel everything by simply saying it's bad and hiding it from them. My mom and dad didn't drink at all. By the time I was in 10th grade I was drinking quite a bit.(especially on weekends.) It was understood that it was not acceptable but I did it anyway.
One thing that I did, that I wasn't really pressured to do was drink at school in 7th grade. A buddy of mine brought a beer one day, and he passed it around our little lunch table. He was known to be a trouble maker, but he did not pressure me to drink. I'm the one that said let me have a sip. He even brought a beer for each of us the rest of that week. It was a stupid thing to do. But hell I was growing and learning. I'm just lucky we never got caught. There's only so much you can shelter you child from. Once they are out the door you can only hope you've raised them good enough to make the right decisions on their own. While I've done things that arent exactly right, I dont deem as very bad from my own set of morals. There are other things I do and dont do that I feel are far more important to maintain within myself to keep me in the right state of mind.
I know that he will eventually do things and experiment with things that I don't want him to. That's part of growing up. My only hope is that if he ever finds himself in trouble and needs help that I have instilled in him enough confidence in me that I will be the one he trusts and calls to help him out. It sounds like your father built in you that kind of confidence and trust.
I agree 100%. I think it's the boredom of the small towns that leads them to experement a little more. That's why we make sure we get to know his friends. We also lead him towards other outside activities after school. We don't force him to do these outside activities but at least try them. Some stick and some don't. It helps him from becoming bored. Our house is usually where him and his freinds end up at when they are looking for a place to hang out. We have tried to create a place where they feel comfortable. I'd rather see them over here where I know what's going on and I continue to be part of their life than somewhere else where I don't know what's going on.
Not to say that things arent different always. But I'm glad your kid has a good head on his shoulders. That says a lot about you as a father.
Thanks. I'm sure in time he will begin to start pulling away but by that time I am hoping he learned enough to make somewhat mature decisions.
Another thing that can have an adverse affect on kids is trying to hide them from alcohol and telling them its bad. The kids I know whose parents did this, started abusing alcohol at an early age. When I was in high school, as long as I told my dad that we were going to have a few beers he was fine with it. Mainly b/c he would do the same things in high school and he knew we weren't driving anywhere, and my friends parents were there and watching us. My dad has praised me for the fact that I dont drink and drive. My dad did it all the time when he was young and got tickets that he would find the next morning and not even remember receiving.
I agree. You can't stifel everything by simply saying it's bad and hiding it from them. My mom and dad didn't drink at all. By the time I was in 10th grade I was drinking quite a bit.(especially on weekends.) It was understood that it was not acceptable but I did it anyway.
One thing that I did, that I wasn't really pressured to do was drink at school in 7th grade. A buddy of mine brought a beer one day, and he passed it around our little lunch table. He was known to be a trouble maker, but he did not pressure me to drink. I'm the one that said let me have a sip. He even brought a beer for each of us the rest of that week. It was a stupid thing to do. But hell I was growing and learning. I'm just lucky we never got caught. There's only so much you can shelter you child from. Once they are out the door you can only hope you've raised them good enough to make the right decisions on their own. While I've done things that arent exactly right, I dont deem as very bad from my own set of morals. There are other things I do and dont do that I feel are far more important to maintain within myself to keep me in the right state of mind.
I know that he will eventually do things and experiment with things that I don't want him to. That's part of growing up. My only hope is that if he ever finds himself in trouble and needs help that I have instilled in him enough confidence in me that I will be the one he trusts and calls to help him out. It sounds like your father built in you that kind of confidence and trust.
RickwithaTbird
02-14-2005, 12:29 AM
I have to agree that kids now days are a lot more ballsy than kids I remember growing up with. I mean, there were kids in my 6th grade class that smoked weed, and drank, and sniffed coke, but I had been taught about those things enough to know that I shouldn't be doing them, and I didnt want to. I never drank alcohol until I was a junior in high school, and I didn't ever try smoking weed until after 11th grade. I was taught about those things, and I had a really negative view about them. I knew a lot of people that were the same way. Now though I see 8 year olds that smoke weed, cigarettes, drink, cuss, and talk shit to older kids. I think kids need to be smacked (not in the face though) sometimes by their parents. Thats what kept me in line. People are too afraid of hitting their kids because it is always called abuse. Discipline can consist of a healthy spanking sometimes.
I think the problem is that people are having kids at younger ages, and dont know how to raise a child. They don't know how to sit them down and tell them that they are being punished for what they did, why they shouldn't do it, and if they ever do it again, to expect more punishment. I think (besides my dad going a little overboard with the smacking sometimes) I had the greatest parents in the world. I never got into any real trouble. Ever. I think high schools should have a new parenting skills curriculum, so they can learn how to punish kids. They just get away with too much now days.
I dont think society is going down the drain though, I see a lot of progress too. There are kids that are contributing to society, kids that are making scientific discoveries, kids that know how to trade on wall street.... there are a lot of amazing kids out there, its just that the bad kids are getting worse, and the good kids are getting smarter. I think that society will recognize this. Like Texas said, not all people realize they are doing something bad until they run into a bad situation. I think that society is the same. Not everyone realizes that there is a problem, but eventually society as a whole will start to work together and raise our kids with stronger moral compasses. At least I hope so anyways.
Blame this all on Britney Spears.
I think the problem is that people are having kids at younger ages, and dont know how to raise a child. They don't know how to sit them down and tell them that they are being punished for what they did, why they shouldn't do it, and if they ever do it again, to expect more punishment. I think (besides my dad going a little overboard with the smacking sometimes) I had the greatest parents in the world. I never got into any real trouble. Ever. I think high schools should have a new parenting skills curriculum, so they can learn how to punish kids. They just get away with too much now days.
I dont think society is going down the drain though, I see a lot of progress too. There are kids that are contributing to society, kids that are making scientific discoveries, kids that know how to trade on wall street.... there are a lot of amazing kids out there, its just that the bad kids are getting worse, and the good kids are getting smarter. I think that society will recognize this. Like Texas said, not all people realize they are doing something bad until they run into a bad situation. I think that society is the same. Not everyone realizes that there is a problem, but eventually society as a whole will start to work together and raise our kids with stronger moral compasses. At least I hope so anyways.
Blame this all on Britney Spears.
DGB454
02-14-2005, 08:14 AM
Speaking of Britney Spears. She is a product of her upbringing also. I see her little sister is beginning to follow in her footsteps. Blame their mom and dad.
2strokebloke
02-14-2005, 02:06 PM
I was thinking about this last night, I remember that my uncle who has been working in schools for over two decades now said that he sees less violence and fighting in schools now than he did twenty years ago. He says that while things like teen pregnancy have gone up, there's less alcohol use and less drugs use these days than back then.
Perhaps we're just imagining the problem is growing, when all it's doing is shifting to different areas? After all people have been complaining about "today's children" for the past 50 years.
Perhaps we're just imagining the problem is growing, when all it's doing is shifting to different areas? After all people have been complaining about "today's children" for the past 50 years.
TexasF355F1
02-14-2005, 03:24 PM
I know that he will eventually do things and experiment with things that I don't want him to. That's part of growing up. My only hope is that if he ever finds himself in trouble and needs help that I have instilled in him enough confidence in me that I will be the one he trusts and calls to help him out. It sounds like your father built in you that kind of confidence and trust.
Indeed he did. I would say both of my parents did. They are, however, two completely different types of people. My dad was the partier, lets have fun guy. But he was also very very serious b/c he had to put himself through school. He worked 40+ hours a week and still graduated with a 3.9 gpa, actually from the same college I will be graduating from too. My gpa on the other hand is rather low, but instead of blowing up and getting upset about my grades, he just wants to see my receive my diploma.
He knows how much I hate school and that it's very hard for me to actually sit down and study. I just can't do it, we both think we have ADD. Although my mom just finds it as an excuse. He also knows that I 'm very smart and that grades are just that...grades. He knows that my peronality and ability to get along with others and respect my superiors will get me far in life. Both of my parents have said they have no worries about me succeeding in life. I really have that ability to see what kind of person someone really is and whether they are trusting or not. He bases that off my friends. Which we all do stupid shit, but he knows we're all just doing what him and his friends did.
He also respects the fact that I take the responsibility on myself to be the designated driver instead of expecting someone else to. My dad told me many times that he would wake up and have tickets on his desk from the night before and not remember them at all. He really appreciates that I think a lot more than he did.
My mom is the complete opposite. My mom is the super christian oriented kind of person. She's very family oriented and sees so many things as wrong that my dad and I dont. If I were to have a girl spend the night my mom would flip out. I mean literally yell at me about how wrong it is etc. My dad on the other hand doesnt see it as wrong, especially if you really care for them. My mom is just an extreme worrier and its hard to deal with at times.
Anyways, I just wanted to give an example of how I've been raised. Even though I'm single with no prospects in sight I still think about my own kids and how they will turn out. I just look at myself and know that some of me will be in them to a degree and they will be just fine. There are a few things I will do differently that my parents did for me. But thats another story.
Oh yea and I blame Britney Spears too. HAHA
Indeed he did. I would say both of my parents did. They are, however, two completely different types of people. My dad was the partier, lets have fun guy. But he was also very very serious b/c he had to put himself through school. He worked 40+ hours a week and still graduated with a 3.9 gpa, actually from the same college I will be graduating from too. My gpa on the other hand is rather low, but instead of blowing up and getting upset about my grades, he just wants to see my receive my diploma.
He knows how much I hate school and that it's very hard for me to actually sit down and study. I just can't do it, we both think we have ADD. Although my mom just finds it as an excuse. He also knows that I 'm very smart and that grades are just that...grades. He knows that my peronality and ability to get along with others and respect my superiors will get me far in life. Both of my parents have said they have no worries about me succeeding in life. I really have that ability to see what kind of person someone really is and whether they are trusting or not. He bases that off my friends. Which we all do stupid shit, but he knows we're all just doing what him and his friends did.
He also respects the fact that I take the responsibility on myself to be the designated driver instead of expecting someone else to. My dad told me many times that he would wake up and have tickets on his desk from the night before and not remember them at all. He really appreciates that I think a lot more than he did.
My mom is the complete opposite. My mom is the super christian oriented kind of person. She's very family oriented and sees so many things as wrong that my dad and I dont. If I were to have a girl spend the night my mom would flip out. I mean literally yell at me about how wrong it is etc. My dad on the other hand doesnt see it as wrong, especially if you really care for them. My mom is just an extreme worrier and its hard to deal with at times.
Anyways, I just wanted to give an example of how I've been raised. Even though I'm single with no prospects in sight I still think about my own kids and how they will turn out. I just look at myself and know that some of me will be in them to a degree and they will be just fine. There are a few things I will do differently that my parents did for me. But thats another story.
Oh yea and I blame Britney Spears too. HAHA
fredjacksonsan
02-15-2005, 01:35 PM
I still say we eat the babies...whos with me!
MMmm-mm good, mmm-mm good, that's what Campbell's babes are MMM-mm GOOD!
however, cannibalism = :nono:
MMmm-mm good, mmm-mm good, that's what Campbell's babes are MMM-mm GOOD!
however, cannibalism = :nono:
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