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12 votes
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The value of extended families
6 votes -
TietoEVRY, a software company from Finland, has developed a new font called Polite Type which uses machine learning to rewrite offensive language into more inclusive forms
10 votes -
Inside Roblox's war on porn - The game platform is extremely popular with children, and the company is waging an endless fight against "condo games": explicit, often sex-themed user creations
19 votes -
Kooky conspiracy theories are detracting from the very real issue of child trafficking
8 votes -
At a loss for words: How a flawed idea is teaching millions of kids to be poor readers
35 votes -
Population decline due to expected global crash in children being born
18 votes -
I’m an epidemiologist and a dad. Here’s why I think schools should reopen
9 votes -
US pediatricians call for in-person school this fall
12 votes -
YouTube brings summer camp home to kids. Experience adventure, arts, sports or STEM camp at home with #CampYouTube
3 votes -
From homeless refugee to chess prodigy, nine-year-old dreams of becoming youngest Grandmaster
6 votes -
WHO warns millions of children at risk as Covid-19 pandemic disrupts routine vaccinations
7 votes -
Families of children with disabilities face acute challenges under COVID-19
8 votes -
What if you don't know if you want a child?
Sorry for the huge train of thought, but I prefer it raw like this. We are dating for 3.5 years and the subject came up a couple of times. We both didn't want, but it was not set in stone. We just...
Sorry for the huge train of thought, but I prefer it raw like this.
We are dating for 3.5 years and the subject came up a couple of times. We both didn't want, but it was not set in stone. We just didn't want at that time.
Three days ago she said she want one in the future. I don't, but I'm not sure.
I asked jokingly if this is where we have to let each other go.
What now?
I have three nieces and I know the hard work and problems my two brothers are dealing with (two are teenagers).
I don't want that, but at the same time i look at my youngest niece and she is so amazing.
I can't figure out if i want this or not.
I don't think we should have kids because she is obese and dealing with food and anxiety issues, and I deal with anxiety and alcohol issues.
I would teach them a good relationship with food. I'm active, eat clean, i'm slim, fit, lift weights, but have the problem with alcohol which i try to manage, but not at all. I drink too much at least once every one or two weeks.
My SO eats junk food, soda, sugar, everything. She is obese now. She wasn't when we started dating. Overweight, but not obese.
She is now at risk of diabetes. I hate it and i'm resenting this to the point I lost attraction.It got to the point were i feel ashamed when I see her family eating a lot, which is all they do. Her brother was ok, now he is obese. His girlfriend turned obese.
I know people say you need to break up because we are incompatible, but it doesn't work like this. We are good together in every other aspect. We treat each other with respect, we have hobbies in common, we are a good couple on the surface.
If I break up, what reason I could give? It's not a matter of just telling "we are incompatible" after almost 4 years.
I have no health issues when i checked with the doctor last year.
We both made promises of solving these issues, but it's not happening.
If we have a child, who teaches him about food, what to eat or not? What should we buy? And about alcohol?
Gym and fitness. I adore. She does not. What example should we give to our kid?
Alcohol. I drink a lot. She drinks, but only enough.
How does this work?
This is eating me alive...
Edit: we don't live together and have jobs at different cities. In this pandemic we are at our homes, which is the same city, but once this pass we will live apart until one of us can transfer to live together.
18 votes -
Children growing up after this crisis will use far more oral language after it ends
10 votes -
The real Lord of the Flies: What happened when six boys were shipwrecked for fifteen months
32 votes -
A short history of child protection in the UK, with discussion about the impact of temporary coronavirus law
6 votes -
Prison inmates in Western Australia made 100 school desks in less than two weeks to donate to families for children homeschooling during the coronavirus pandemic
5 votes -
There has not been a single instance of a child under ten transmitting the coronavirus, even in contact tracing carried out by World Health Organization
10 votes -
A very detailed Corona curriculum for your kids
5 votes -
DIY Kids Instrument Craft: Washboard and Spoons
4 votes -
Alcohol sales banned in Greenland capital during lockdown – move aims to cut violence against children during coronavirus confinement
11 votes -
Meet seventeen-year-old Avi Schiffmann who runs a coronavirus tracking website used by 40+ million globally
6 votes -
Norway's prime minister will hold a separate press conference for children to answer their questions about the coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
Greenland has the world's highest suicide rate, and teenage boys are especially vulnerable
9 votes -
A letter to other parents
Dear almost all other parents with kids between the ages of 2 and 5 years old, I appreciate all you're doing. You are taking an active role in raising your children, and I applaud you for that......
Dear almost all other parents with kids between the ages of 2 and 5 years old,
I appreciate all you're doing. You are taking an active role in raising your children, and I applaud you for that... it's hard to do nowadays.
But this is a rant that I won't say to your face because I largely believe in parental autonomy. You need to hear it though. It's important, because many of your good intentions are crippling your child's development., and my own kid's. If at the end of this rant, you agree with it and aren't horrified or offended, PM me cause we could be best friends.
So let's start with the basics: If you take your young child to a children's play area, stop with the hovering. If your child can walk for more than 5 steps without falling on their face, give them some space (like more than 15 feet). Even if they get hurt, that is a teachable moment. If nobody is going to the hospital, don't worry about intervening. Sure they might get some scrapes and bruises, a couple of hard falls....but they will learn and they will grow. Shielding them from everything teaches them nothing. Hovering over your children also scares other children that are not yours, and discourages social interaction. I know this, because I am a very tall man who easily and accidentally terrifies anybody more than a foot shorter than me. It took me a few months to learn this lesson.
Next, let's talk about sharing. I know everyone wants to instill in their child that it is important to share. It's generally a good principal. But sharing is a two-way street, and every time you intervene whenever there is the slightest possibility of conflict, you're teaching your kid that 'sharing means to give whatever someone else wants to them no matter what' and you're teaching my kid 'you can totally take what other people want with 0 consequences.' My child can utterly dominate children twice as old because of this. I do my best to prevent that from getting instilled, but it's a long uphill battle when myself and my spouse are the only two teaching that lesson.
Children need to be able to have conflict with their peers. They need space from adults, and learn to interact with others their age. Yes there will be conflict, pain, and suffering. But there will also be joy, reconciliation, and fun. It's part of learning to be a human with empathy. My child learns far more about socializing in 5 minutes of interaction with your kid than 5 hours of interaction with me.
Next up: Potty training. My kid potty trained at 2 years old. They showed signs of being ready at 18 months, but couldn't quite verbalize well enough at that point. By 2 years, they were completely potty trained during the day. Took a while before being able to get through the night without accidents (tiny bladders have trouble going 8+ hours without peeing), but during the waking day 0 accidents for months on end. I see many of your 4+ year olds still wearing diapers and shitting themselves in the aisles in the grocery store, and it's one of the most depressing things ever. If your kid isn't potty trained by 3, it's your failing, not theirs.
I know my spouse and I are not the best parents (our stance on screen time is very controversial), but I also can blatantly see when development issues are forming as a result of hovering parents, both in my child and yours. Do these things, and everything will be better for everyone.
Signed,
A parent who is judging you harshly.
22 votes -
"Pyke notte thy nostrellys." A 15th-century guide on children's manners has been digitized for first time
10 votes -
Boy Scouts of America file for bankruptcy due to sex-abuse lawsuits
21 votes -
Why it's cheaper to have a baby in Finland than in the US
11 votes -
The nuclear family was a mistake
14 votes -
The number of teenagers registered as girls at birth who have been diagnosed with gender dysphoria has increased by almost 1,500 percent in ten years in Sweden
10 votes -
Finland blazes trail in keeping citizens cycling and healthy – country routinely praised for its schools system aims to do the same with preventive health
4 votes -
New data from Sweden challenges the idea that parents of autistic children refrain from having more children, a practice known as reproductive stoppage
4 votes -
I worry for my teenage boys – the beauty standards for young men are out of control
28 votes -
Why Republicans are suddenly in a rush to regulate every trans kid’s puberty
14 votes -
An attempt to name a child after the Devil has won no sympathy from Iceland's official naming committee
12 votes -
Virginia school board stops removal of LGBTQ-themed children’s books
7 votes -
Two gay Chinese dads. One long and winding trip to fatherhood
9 votes -
How my daughter disrupted my politics
16 votes -
Blind bags: How toy makers are making a fortune with child gambling
9 votes -
Cartoonist draws a happy ending for twins that he accidentally put on the "naughty list"
7 votes -
Apple and Google named in US lawsuit over Congolese child cobalt mining deaths
7 votes -
Why your kid loves the garbage truck so much
17 votes -
Why is childcare so expensive?
13 votes -
I showed vintage Mister Rogers to my 21st-century kids
14 votes -
Nothing to sneeze at: $2,659 bill to pluck doll's shoe from girl's nose
6 votes -
In Denmark, children's homes are places of stability, comfort and support – now a British entrepreneur is bringing the model to the UK
3 votes -
YouTube is requiring all new and existing videos be marked as "Made for Kids" if they're intended for children, which will disable personalized ads, end screens, comments, and more
16 votes -
China introduces restrictions on video games for minors
8 votes -
Block on GM rice ‘has cost millions of lives and led to child blindness’
10 votes