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Agree.There are just way too many social misunderstandings for it to possibly be easy for them. ND people can't be behind all of it.
The combination of extreme, paranoid over-protectiveness combined with micromanaging hyper-judgemental dictator style of parenting makes me sad for both parent and child.As opposed to say, growing up before 1980, before the internet social media, before cable television, before controlling, "helicopter" parents hid their children indoors and made "play dates", when people were out of the house most of the day... simply because there was nothing to do in the house (except chores). As kids old enough to ride a bike, we roamed free... totally feral... zero supervision. We weren't allowed in the house unless there was some very serious weather outside (tornados and hurricanes)... and we PLAYED outside with lightning storms in our bathing suits and high winds because it was fun! The bottom line was that we were not socially isolating ourselves like many do today. We certainly were not "safety conscious" to the point of isolation and social dysfunction.
As opposed to say, growing up before 1980, before the internet social media, before cable television, before controlling, "helicopter" parents hid their children indoors and made "play dates", when people were out of the house most of the day... simply because there was nothing to do in the house (except chores). As kids old enough to ride a bike, we roamed free... totally feral... zero supervision. We weren't allowed in the house unless there was some very serious weather outside (tornados and hurricanes)... and we PLAYED outside with lightning storms in our bathing suits and high winds because it was fun! The bottom line was that we were not socially isolating ourselves like many do today. We certainly were not "safety conscious" to the point of isolation and social dysfunction.
As opposed to say, growing up before 1980, before the internet social media, before cable television, before controlling, "helicopter" parents hid their children indoors and made "play dates", when people were out of the house most of the day... simply because there was nothing to do in the house (except chores). As kids old enough to ride a bike, we roamed free... totally feral... zero supervision. We weren't allowed in the house unless there was some very serious weather outside (tornados and hurricanes)... and we PLAYED outside with lightning storms in our bathing suits and high winds because it was fun! The bottom line was that we were not socially isolating ourselves like many do today. We certainly were not "safety conscious" to the point of isolation and social dysfunction.
Omg yessocial media, and mainstream media blowing everything out of proportion with their dramatic, fear mongering, "news alerts" and "storm alerts" often for things that, 40 years ago, would have gotten a 3 sentence acknowledgment and then on to the next storyline. I also blame smart phones that have allowed people to text and "doom scroll" through their social media apps instead of actually talking to people face-to-face.
Even in New York City and other dense concentrations of population, there are many people who are lonely, unable to find even one kindred spirit despite the available variety.There are just way too many social misunderstandings for it to possibly be easy for them. ND people can't be behind all of it.
This rant is based on what I recall of my cultural Anthropology studies in university.It's important to remember what the human animal actually is because that affects the way our societies work, or don't.
Our ancestors are carnivorous apes and apex predators. That is the basis of our social hierarchies, and later on the feudal system of government. The toughest ape rules the roost. We tended to mostly live in small tribal groups that could on occasion cooperate with other nearby groups to aid in hunting larger animals etc but at the same time we would also fight with neighbouring groups over territory and hunting rights.
Actually, it's an Austro-anthropic view taught to me by people who are still partly living their paleolithic lifestyle today.Second, this idea that we have always been warring feudal groups is simply wrong. That's a western eurocentric view that likes to think the path that happen in Europe was universal.