Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 I totally agree. Too many things can happen in just a few minutes and kids cannot be trusted at that age. Kids will be kids and can only make age appropriate choices. They can be manipulated into opening the door for a stranger, tempted to try to cook or do any number of unsafe things. In a message dated 10/24/2009 4:17:09 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, anuria-67854@... writes: I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible parents do not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for their kids' safety and welfare. When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; when elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus home and stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my Sister's age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know whether my nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. At age 11 I was considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school activities then walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom and had to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while she worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that child was little he was never left alone to take care of himself; she made sure he had interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and Scouting and such when he was older. Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids alone and unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge of " a younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " a young child that way. -Annie > > > > I don't have kids either but the idea of leaving a six and eight year old > > home alone together,even for a half an hour,is inconceivable to me. > > Unless you are independently wealthy, that is a fact of life for most parents now. Most families don't have the support and organization members of groups like the mormons do. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 And I wanted to say I totally agree with the last part too. Older kids do not substitute as adults. As we can see by recent kidnappings, there are sickos out there ready to prey on children left alone. I don't even let my kids go to the mailbox without me watching them. In a message dated 10/24/2009 4:17:09 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, anuria-67854@... writes: I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible parents do not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for their kids' safety and welfare. When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; when elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus home and stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my Sister's age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know whether my nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. At age 11 I was considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school activities then walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom and had to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while she worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that child was little he was never left alone to take care of himself; she made sure he had interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and Scouting and such when he was older. Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids alone and unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge of " a younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " a young child that way. -Annie > > > > I don't have kids either but the idea of leaving a six and eight year old > > home alone together,even for a half an hour,is inconceivable to me. > > Unless you are independently wealthy, that is a fact of life for most parents now. Most families don't have the support and organization members of groups like the mormons do. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 Thanks, Heidi. It was a long time ago and the cat was fine in the end, so I have, but it makes me think. When your parents don't provide guidance or boundaries or even supervision, you make a lot of mistakes in life. It's natural to you assume these are your fault and that they have something to do with your own inadequacy. It's not likely to occur to you that the problem is really you were given too much responsibility that you were developmentally unprepared for. Best, Ashana Keep up with people you care about with Yahoo! India Mail. Learn how. http://in.overview.mail.yahoo.com/connectmore Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 , Thank you so much for your post, for taking the time and for your compassion. I think after I cut the cat, I mostly felt numb, and underneath that, I think I was terrified. I did not know what kinds of things can kill someone, but I understood that living creatures can die. I had been to one or two funerals by then, and I understood that certain things can happen that will make you lie down and close your eyes and that after that you won't ever open them again. I also knew that my own cuts and scratches healed, but I don't think I connected that to the deep cut I saw in my cat--which exposed his fat in a way that just did not seem right at all to me. I don't think I knew that even deep cuts like that can be closed up and that they can heal. I have no idea what my mom did or said after it happened. I don't think she said anything very important. I think it is what she did not say that made a difference. Best, Ashana Add whatever you love to the Yahoo! India homepage. Try now! http://in.yahoo.com/trynew Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 At 11:42 PM 10/23/2009 W. A. Max wrote: >In fact, my mother often left my sister and I alone at home >while she ran errands when we were a bit older. So I guess >that's another qustion. Would you leave a six and eight year >old at home alone for a few hours? Leaving an eight-year-old home alone for short (and by short I mean 15-30 minutes, not a few hours) might be okay if the eight-year-old in question is unusually mature and well-behaved for that age, and there is a trusted adult close at hand in case of trouble, but I can't imagine leaving an eight-year-old and a six-year-old home alone together for any length of time. It is wrong to expect the older of those children to be responsible for the younger one and two young children are more likely to get into trouble than one alone and even the older child alone shouldn't be expected to stay home alone for any longer period. There is just too much that can go wrong. My nada started leaving my half-sister home alone at night while she went to work when my sister was 5. She lived in a condo at the time and said the guy who lived in the next condo was there to deal with anything that went wrong. Their condos shared a wall on one side and their doors were a couple feet apart, so he really was close but I can't begin to understand how my nada thought that was good enough. How is a man sleeping in the next apartment going to know if something is wrong? I was very tempted to call children's services about that, but the idea of my sister being sent to live with her father didn't seem like it would improve the situation. Her father's problems are different, but I wouldn't call him mentally healthy either. Instead, I eventually convinced nada to move to the city where I live. I didn't and still don't want her here, but I couldn't stand the idea of my sister growing up with no reasonable adults nearby. Now my sister has grown up and wants nothing to do with nada and nada claims that she doesn't understand why. -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible parents do not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for their kids' safety and welfare. When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; when elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus home and stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my Sister's age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know whether my nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. At age 11 I was considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school activities then walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom and had to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while she worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that child was little he was never left alone to take care of himself; she made sure he had interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and Scouting and such when he was older. Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids alone and unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge of " a younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " a young child that way. -Annie > > > > I don't have kids either but the idea of leaving a six and eight year old > > home alone together,even for a half an hour,is inconceivable to me. > > Unless you are independently wealthy, that is a fact of life for most parents now. Most families don't have the support and organization members of groups like the mormons do. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 People who can't watch their kids and be responsible for them shouldn't have them. If that's judgemental, then it is. The welfare of a child comes first. In a message dated 10/24/2009 6:33:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, xrisacct@... writes: > > I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible parents do > not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. > Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for their kids' > safety and welfare. Where I lived ,there weren't any people willing to watch kids, and the local tanf people would not pay money to people-they had to go out and get a job. And no employer ever gave a break at all to any parent if their kid was sick, or in trouble, or alone at home. My cousin lost 4 jobs i none year due to that. It literally was do or die-people lost their kids due to the fact no one would watch them. Add to that that the local grandparents had the idea that the kids had to work out problems for themselves, and refused to watch them, and they still can't do anything to make them help. > > When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; when > elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus home and > stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my Sister's > age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know whether my > nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. But you had someone else willing-the majority of parents nationwide, according to surveys over and over ,do not. You can be as judgmental as you want, but rent is still due at the first week, and if there is no money, there's no place to live. And no one to watch the kids. We watched over a dozen one day, simply because we had a ridiculous amount of food ,were willing ,and the parents were screwed. When cops and others tried to make trouble, I stood up for the kids and parents, and they backed right down-they weren't used to someone knowing the actual laws willing to fight back with a better vocabulary than they had, and they just stood there staring, looking dumbfounded. The heck with them-if it's surivival, I have stood up for anyone. And despite your judgment, that won't make those people I helped out get a sitter no matter what. I knew what to do, but even with that, only one woman was willing to watch my honey's kids, since the laws changed right after Bush took office, and the 50+ people who were willing, went down to two-and the other just simply said no, despite being required by law, and there was nothing we could do. You sound like my nada-she always said there was a way, but I have never found one, and neither ever did she, for most of the things she claimed did have answers. That's just pure abuse-there are not good solutions for most problems despite the rhetoric, and until there are, settling for second best is pretty much what most people have to do. Quoting about your nada's neighbor won't solve that either-we didn't, and neither did most of our neighbors, have anyone to watch the kids. If a woman with 2 kids leaves them, and comes home 6 hours later and they are fine, then she will do it again. She has no other choice in many places in the U.S. At age 11 I was > considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school activities then > walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. Where we lived, there are none, and the age of being able to watch onself was 13. That means if a 12 year old answers the door when a jerk neighbor calls the cops, then your kids are taken out of the home, and the cops don't tell you where they are for up to 48 hours. It didn't happen to us, as we were fortunate. But it happened to enough people, I stopped being judgmental like you, and realized no amount of criticism would cause money to appear, and sitters to appear, for free, or even to be available. Everyone seems to think working women are " magic " , and can make all that happen without help or money, and I know better now. There aren't resources for the majority of Americans anymore, or people helping so those problems will keep happening. Alternet had an article about one Ohio town where men drive to, since there are so many lonely teen girls, and they ask men on the street for sex, basically anyone-and it's due to economics and a lack of things to do. Each and every time the girls were given something to do or some sort of realistic hope, instead of one of those Women Resource Center people giving them a feminist lecture ,that stopped too. I've been offered sex twice by 11 year old little girls-once at Coronado mall in ABQ, and once in West Virginia. Little girls NEVER asked me that in places that had jobs, or parents around. But that is all dependent on things beyond any parent's control. We left WV, as we were able to do so. I know people there now, even if it meant killing someone in cold blood, they would do it, just for a chance to leave. But money doesn't grow on trees, so they get stuck there, and have to go thru the above. > > When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom and had > to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while she > worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that child was > little he was never left alone to take care of himself; The average work week where we lived was 23 hours, the average pay, about 6$ an hour. Both parents worked at the employer's whim, otherwise you lost your job-only took two absences, for any reason ,to be fired. So given that rent averaged 500$ a month, how exactly would you work that, then? Utilities ran $100-400$ a month, too. And don't give me that thing about employer's listening to parents or working with them-I tried that, and so did everyone I knew, and no one ever had an amployer listen ever. If you were called at 2 pm, and told to come to work, you either did it or lost your job. Didn't matter if your kids were 6-8, and came home to an empty house, you still had to go, and the school refused to deliver messages too. And there was always some neighbor who would call the cops on you, unless you gave them food, sex, or something else to get them to shut up. My honey didn't have to do that, since I was there, and really got people like that into some serious problems with their own employers and the cops. But not everyone is quick as I am, went to college and took civil rights courses ,or has a 148 IQ, or prior experience with a nada, either. she made sure he had > interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and Scouting and > such when he was older. Martial arts courses are 100$ a month where I live, 60$ per person where I used to live, So how ,on the above work schedules and money would you do that? Hmm? You wouldn't. And when the cop showed up as he did with my cousin, Mr Whitey from Barboursville, and offered to get rid of her problems with the cops in return for sex, and he told her he had two girls that " looked like her " , and it was either that or lose them you'd be thinking twice too. People get pushed into situations like that. They don't choose them. And in some places like where I used to live, that is the only choice there is, at all. > > Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids alone You are a pretty self righteous person if after reading the above, you still think that, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself. All your nada-like judgment is not going to make money appear where it doesn't exist. And that is now the operative m.o. for most people, most parents, nationwide. and > unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge of " a > younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " a young > child that way. Well, when the 9$ an hour cps person shows up, you can explain to her why the kids are alone , and how there isn't any money. I'm sure that will make you feel good and self righteous to put someone down like that, as their kids get taken away. I saw that happen, which is why even now I will not report people to cps. They didn't do anything but terrorize anyone anyway. Only one person listened, and she helped us out, AND was made head of the local cps unit right afterwards too. But for the other people, who don't know what to do, your judgment won't help them one bit. Women like that need help, not judgment. As the Bible says, mercy triumphs over judgment. I saw what I saw, including blacks getting beat up and threatened by cops for no reason ,and I will die a liberal due to that. I was a white separatist at that time too. But I know better now, and know people are just people. They get into situations they can't help. Blacks were doing nothing where I lived, and I watched a white cop throw one kid down, draw a gun, and point it in his face. His anger grew (the kid's), and he started going after people for it. Displaced, repressed anger. He did NOT deserve that, and no one, not even the TV stations, would do anything about it. But no one needs some judgmental jerk like yourself putting them down, just because you think that since your mother got help from someone ,there are other people out there who will on command too. I know better. I will NEVER judge a woman raising kids for being stressed out ever again, no matter what. I have seen women get forced by cops into sex, and threatened, and no one, not even those stupid Women's Resource Center's people and such help them out. I helped them out, cuz I realized enough when I was a kid what it was like to be judged beyond belief, and will NEVER put another person down for that kind of hopeless hell or their inability to get what they need, ever again. NEVER. I learned something about that, and that was my nada was profoundly wrong to judge people in that way. Instead, I will just help them as I have always done. Being a light in the darkness is much more helpful than being the darkness holding a bucket of water for the candle. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 my husband was left alone in the care of his two older sisters who did drugs and drank from the time they were 11...yep....11! It was a crazy situation. He can remember no food to eat and even had the police ask him if he was a missing child from a milk carton. He had a very neglectful childhood and his mother is severely BPD. I am all for sympathizing with those who are less fortunate but the child(s) needs must come first and their safety and wellbeing while mom is at work is JUST AS if not more important than having a roof over their head. In a message dated 10/24/2009 7:46:49 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, darrowby385@... writes: This is not an issue that can be broad brushed on either side of the debate. Good points have been made about the difficulties, especially in the U.S., for finding good childcare when you have a low income, and the horrible dilemmas that many good-hearted low income parents are forced to make. But that does not negate the fact that leaving small children alone is not in the child's best interest, and can amount to neglect. There are abusive and neglectful parents on both ends of the financial spectrum, and all points in between, just as there are caring and responsible ones. The good parents with low income have it a lot tougher. I've been a welfare mom, with four small children, and have pretty much seen it all. Some parents are so beaten down by poverty that they do things that go against their basic values, like leaving their children home alone. Others are abusive and neglectful. One of the most depressing places on earth is the county welfare waiting room. My husband was left alone for long hours, in charge of his younger sister from the age of six. It was very frightening for him at times, and he still has emotional scars from the experience. A six year old doesn't have the cognitive ability to process a situation like that, and just feels the basic emotions of fear and loneliness. In my husband's case, his mother was leaving her children home because she went to the bars after work, but the effect would be the same no matter how legitimate the parent's situation. I also want to add that it would be nice if we had an agreement that even if we disagree, that telling someone " you sound just like my nada " is hitting below the belt. That's about the worst insult I can think of, and none of the good people on this board deserve to be disrespected like that. It's possible to disagree and remain polite. Kate > > > > > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > > 8 and 6. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > > alone. > > > That's a judgment, I lived the facts. Fact is, there is not. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 Yes,and being poor does not equate to being irresponsible in regards to arranging childcare for your children.Working parents find the best childcare they can afford.The availability of reasonably priced,decent childcare is a huge issue for many families but I seriously doubt that most of them are just throwing up their hands and resorting to leaving their kids unattended. > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > 8 and 6. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > alone. > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 3:22:57 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > xrisacct@... writes: > > > > > > > I don't have kids either but the idea of leaving a six and eight year > old > > home alone together,even for a half an hour,is inconceivable to me. > > Unless you are independently wealthy, that is a fact of life for most > parents now. Most families don't have the support and organization members of > groups like the mormons do. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 Xrisa, I just want to offer you some support. I too grew up in a very poor neighborhood and while I'm sure not ever mother was a nada, it was very common for teens to be left home with baby's for days (as the mother may have had 2 or 3 jobs) and young kids to be left home alone. My nada worked over night (when she was working) and left me 11 years old, home with my 4 year old brother, and I was one of the fortunate ones, meaning to have the older child be 11 and not 8, that made us lucky. Whether or not I think its safe, I agree that people that grow up with money do not understand when there is no other options if you want to keep a roof over your head and food in your kids mouth. I think the difference between a parent with no choice and a nada, is the parent with no choice KNOWS what they are doing is wrong and wishes they had another option, and does try to find other options because they hate leaving their kids home alone. Where a nada does not see anything wrong with it. Its funny you said most of the jobs were nursing, because that is one of the reasons I became a nurse, because of the job security. I did everything in my power to get out of that life I was born into, but I'll never forget where I came from. ~Kim > > > > And I wanted to say I totally agree with the last part too. Older kids do > > not substitute as adults. As we can see by recent kidnappings, there are > > sickos out there ready to prey on children left alone. I don't even let my > > kids go to the mailbox without me watching them. > > Then that is because you have money ,and the choices that go with that. Where I used to live ,there were no choices like that, and no money at all. A 4 bedroom house in good condition went thru 4 owners in one year, and that was at a price of $20k. I figured at 7%, for 20 years ,that was 89$ a month. That was still too expensive for most people. > > One neighbor with a really beautiful daughter going to the local university, traded sex with her and her daughter, in exchange for car payments for her car and the daughter's car. No buses and no way to get home for the classes the daughter took. I don't thin kit is right, but I have no way of fixing something like that. No jobs, except nursing, and no way to get that job, unless you get a way to take the ridiculously scheduled courses, some going to ten at night. You have to walk thru a part of town with hookers and murdering thieves and other people. Even withguns on their hips, people were still raped and murdered there. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 I agree with both of you because I am in this situation. I would NEVER under ANY circumstances leave my son alone for ANY period of time but I am very close to losing my job because I missed too many days of work. I got sick and missed a day, my son got sick and missed 2 days, then a baby sitter canceled on me due to her illness and I could not find a back-up sitter, then another baby sitter canceled on me. If I miss ONE more day then I get a week off without pay. If I miss another day after that then I am fired. There is NO sympathy for a single parent, they treat me like I am one of the college kids that just calls out to party. I have been cut down to 15 work hours as punishment for missing days and because I am missing a day this week and next due to court issues in a battle to protect my son from his highly abusive, mentally ill dad. I simply cannot win. Yes, we are still expected to be there for our kids but if I wind up homeless due to no reliable sitter (the ones that advertise want to charge as much as I earn!) then my standing in this court battle would be weakened. They might actually favor an abusive dad to a homeless mom. So, I cannot stay home sick or miss work for any reason. My son cannot stay home sick or for any reason. I am in the USA and I am in this situation. This is one of the reasons that low-income people stay in abusive relationships, because the financial situation is nearly impossible. I am an educated woman too but PDex tore me down so badly that I could not finish my bachelors degree, I maxed out my student loans because he would not work more than part time and he went a year without working at all, so I cannot afford to go back to school to get my life back where it was before the abuse. We need a better safety-net for abused parents and for single parents in general so the kids don't lose out due to their parents financial situation. ________________________________ To: WTOAdultChildren1 Sent: Sat, October 24, 2009 7:05:19 PM Subject: Re: nada negligence Sorry, but I have a different opinion than you do and I think its selfish and narcissistic and irresponsible to leave small children alone for hours unsupervised. An intelligent and thoughtful parent would make some kind of plans with co-workers, relatives or neighbors to have their kids safely watched. It ought to be obvious that its irresponsible and considered to be neglect, because Childrens Services will remove children from parents who do that. -Annie > > > > > > I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible parents do > > not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. > > Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for their kids' > > safety and welfare. > > Where I lived ,there weren't any people willing to watch kids, and the local tanf people would not pay money to people-they had to go out and get a job. And no employer ever gave a break at all to any parent if their kid was sick, or in trouble, or alone at home. My cousin lost 4 jobs i none year due to that. It literally was do or die-people lost their kids due to the fact no one would watch them. Add to that that the local grandparents had the idea that the kids had to work out problems for themselves, and refused to watch them, and they still can't do anything to make them help. > > > > > > When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; when > > elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus home and > > stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my Sister's > > age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know whether my > > nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. > > But you had someone else willing-the majority of parents nationwide, according to surveys over and over ,do not. > > You can be as judgmental as you want, but rent is still due at the first week, and if there is no money, there's no place to live. And no one to watch the kids. We watched over a dozen one day, simply because we had a ridiculous amount of food ,were willing ,and the parents were screwed. When cops and others tried to make trouble, I stood up for the kids and parents, and they backed right down-they weren't used to someone knowing the actual laws willing to fight back with a better vocabulary than they had, and they just stood there staring, looking dumbfounded. The heck with them-if it's surivival, I have stood up for anyone. And despite your judgment, that won't make those people I helped out get a sitter no matter what. I knew what to do, but even with that, only one woman was willing to watch my honey's kids, since the laws changed right after Bush took office, and the 50+ people who were willing, went down to two-and the other just simply said no, > despite being required by law, and there was nothing we could do. > > You sound like my nada-she always said there was a way, but I have never found one, and neither ever did she, for most of the things she claimed did have answers. That's just pure abuse-there are not good solutions for most problems despite the rhetoric, and until there are, settling for second best is pretty much what most people have to do. Quoting about your nada's neighbor won't solve that either-we didn't, and neither did most of our neighbors, have anyone to watch the kids. > > If a woman with 2 kids leaves them, and comes home 6 hours later and they are fine, then she will do it again. She has no other choice in many places in the U.S. > > > At age 11 I was > > considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school activities then > > walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. > > Where we lived, there are none, and the age of being able to watch onself was 13. That means if a 12 year old answers the door when a jerk neighbor calls the cops, then your kids are taken out of the home, and the cops don't tell you where they are for up to 48 hours. > > It didn't happen to us, as we were fortunate. But it happened to enough people, I stopped being judgmental like you, and realized no amount of criticism would cause money to appear, and sitters to appear, for free, or even to be available. > > Everyone seems to think working women are " magic " , and can make all that happen without help or money, and I know better now. There aren't resources for the majority of Americans anymore, or people helping so those problems will keep happening. Alternet had an article about one Ohio town where men drive to, since there are so many lonely teen girls, and they ask men on the street for sex, basically anyone-and it's due to economics and a lack of things to do. Each and every time the girls were given something to do or some sort of realistic hope, instead of one of those Women Resource Center people giving them a feminist lecture ,that stopped too. > > I've been offered sex twice by 11 year old little girls-once at Coronado mall in ABQ, and once in West Virginia. Little girls NEVER asked me that in places that had jobs, or parents around. But that is all dependent on things beyond any parent's control. We left WV, as we were able to do so. I know people there now, even if it meant killing someone in cold blood, they would do it, just for a chance to leave. But money doesn't grow on trees, so they get stuck there, and have to go thru the above. > > > > > > When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom and had > > to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while she > > worked.. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that child was > > little he was never left alone to take care of himself; > > The average work week where we lived was 23 hours, the average pay, about 6$ an hour. Both parents worked at the employer's whim, otherwise you lost your job-only took two absences, for any reason ,to be fired. > > So given that rent averaged 500$ a month, how exactly would you work that, then? Utilities ran $100-400$ a month, too. And don't give me that thing about employer's listening to parents or working with them-I tried that, and so did everyone I knew, and no one ever had an amployer listen ever. If you were called at 2 pm, and told to come to work, you either did it or lost your job.. Didn't matter if your kids were 6-8, and came home to an empty house, you still had to go, and the school refused to deliver messages too. And there was always some neighbor who would call the cops on you, unless you gave them food, sex, or something else to get them to shut up. My honey didn't have to do that, since I was there, and really got people like that into some serious problems with their own employers and the cops. But not everyone is quick as I am, went to college and took civil rights courses ,or has a 148 IQ, or prior experience with a nada, either. > > > she made sure he had > > interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and Scouting and > > such when he was older. > > Martial arts courses are 100$ a month where I live, 60$ per person where I used to live, So how ,on the above work schedules and money would you do that? Hmm? You wouldn't. And when the cop showed up as he did with my cousin, Mr Whitey from Barboursville, and offered to get rid of her problems with the cops in return for sex, and he told her he had two girls that " looked like her " , and it was either that or lose them you'd be thinking twice too. People get pushed into situations like that. They don't choose them. And in some places like where I used to live, that is the only choice there is, at all. > > > > > > Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids alone > > You are a pretty self righteous person if after reading the above, you still think that, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself. All your nada-like judgment is not going to make money appear where it doesn't exist. And that is now the operative m.o. for most people, most parents, nationwide. > > > and > > unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge of " a > > younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " a young > > child that way. > > Well, when the 9$ an hour cps person shows up, you can explain to her why the kids are alone , and how there isn't any money. I'm sure that will make you feel good and self righteous to put someone down like that, as their kids get taken away. I saw that happen, which is why even now I will not report people to cps. They didn't do anything but terrorize anyone anyway. Only one person listened, and she helped us out, AND was made head of the local cps unit right afterwards too. But for the other people, who don't know what to do, your judgment won't help them one bit. > > Women like that need help, not judgment. As the Bible says, mercy triumphs over judgment. I saw what I saw, including blacks getting beat up and threatened by cops for no reason ,and I will die a liberal due to that. I was a white separatist at that time too. But I know better now, and know people are just people. They get into situations they can't help. Blacks were doing nothing where I lived, and I watched a white cop throw one kid down, draw a gun, and point it in his face. His anger grew (the kid's), and he started going after people for it. Displaced, repressed anger. He did NOT deserve that, and no one, not even the TV stations, would do anything about it. But no one needs some judgmental jerk like yourself putting them down, just because you think that since your mother got help from someone ,there are other people out there who will on command too. I know better. I will NEVER judge a woman raising kids for being stressed out ever again, no > matter what. I have seen women get forced by cops into sex, and threatened, and no one, not even those stupid Women's Resource Center's people and such help them out. I helped them out, cuz I realized enough when I was a kid what it was like to be judged beyond belief, and will NEVER put another person down for that kind of hopeless hell or their inability to get what they need, ever again. NEVER. I learned something about that, and that was my nada was profoundly wrong to judge people in that way. Instead, I will just help them as I have always done. > > Being a light in the darkness is much more helpful than being the darkness holding a bucket of water for the candle. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 Daycares are only opening during the day. Many parents (most of which where I grew up) were single and held evening or part time night work too. As for a private sitter, it was often safer to leave the kids home alone and NOT tell anyone that your kids were unsupervised then to take your chances with what kind of people in the neighborhood wouls be available to watch your kids. Many of my neighbors were not the kind of people you'd want to leave your kids with and even if you could find someone, then a parent that can barley afford things as it is, is making $7 or $8 an hour (less when I was a kid) and paying a sitter what? I don't think a sitter will take less than $7-10 an hour. I'm not saying its right, or that I would do it, which is why I did not have any children until I had a career, but this is how life was for many people, and probably still is. ~Kim > > > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > > 8 and 6. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > > alone. > > > > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 3:22:57 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > > xrisacct@ writes: > > > > > > > > > > > > > I don't have kids either but the idea of leaving a six and eight year > > old > > > home alone together,even for a half an hour,is inconceivable to me. > > > > Unless you are independently wealthy, that is a fact of life for most > > parents now. Most families don't have the support and organization members of > > groups like the mormons do. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 I think we should leave out the name calling. To label and judge situations without knowing all the details, leaves us closed to the details when they are trying to be shared. And assuming someone's intelligence level based on life circumstances (that some people on this board may not have lived and I mean growing up in poverty) can start to offend others. I too, have my own set of assumptions that I'm sure if I listed there would be people on this list that I would offend. But we should at least refrain from name calling, because it never gets anyone anywhere. We all know that first hand. ~Kim > > > > > > > > > > I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible parents do > > > not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. > > > Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for their kids' > > > safety and welfare. > > > > Where I lived ,there weren't any people willing to watch kids, and the local tanf people would not pay money to people-they had to go out and get a job. And no employer ever gave a break at all to any parent if their kid was sick, or in trouble, or alone at home. My cousin lost 4 jobs i none year due to that. It literally was do or die-people lost their kids due to the fact no one would watch them. Add to that that the local grandparents had the idea that the kids had to work out problems for themselves, and refused to watch them, and they still can't do anything to make them help. > > > > > > > > > > When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; when > > > elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus home and > > > stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my Sister's > > > age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know whether my > > > nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. > > > > But you had someone else willing-the majority of parents nationwide, according to surveys over and over ,do not. > > > > You can be as judgmental as you want, but rent is still due at the first week, and if there is no money, there's no place to live. And no one to watch the kids. We watched over a dozen one day, simply because we had a ridiculous amount of food ,were willing ,and the parents were screwed. When cops and others tried to make trouble, I stood up for the kids and parents, and they backed right down-they weren't used to someone knowing the actual laws willing to fight back with a better vocabulary than they had, and they just stood there staring, looking dumbfounded. The heck with them-if it's surivival, I have stood up for anyone. And despite your judgment, that won't make those people I helped out get a sitter no matter what. I knew what to do, but even with that, only one woman was willing to watch my honey's kids, since the laws changed right after Bush took office, and the 50+ people who were willing, went down to two-and the other just simply said no, > > despite being required by law, and there was nothing we could do. > > > > You sound like my nada-she always said there was a way, but I have never found one, and neither ever did she, for most of the things she claimed did have answers. That's just pure abuse-there are not good solutions for most problems despite the rhetoric, and until there are, settling for second best is pretty much what most people have to do. Quoting about your nada's neighbor won't solve that either-we didn't, and neither did most of our neighbors, have anyone to watch the kids. > > > > If a woman with 2 kids leaves them, and comes home 6 hours later and they are fine, then she will do it again. She has no other choice in many places in the U.S. > > > > > > At age 11 I was > > > considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school activities then > > > walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. > > > > Where we lived, there are none, and the age of being able to watch onself was 13. That means if a 12 year old answers the door when a jerk neighbor calls the cops, then your kids are taken out of the home, and the cops don't tell you where they are for up to 48 hours. > > > > It didn't happen to us, as we were fortunate. But it happened to enough people, I stopped being judgmental like you, and realized no amount of criticism would cause money to appear, and sitters to appear, for free, or even to be available. > > > > Everyone seems to think working women are " magic " , and can make all that happen without help or money, and I know better now. There aren't resources for the majority of Americans anymore, or people helping so those problems will keep happening. Alternet had an article about one Ohio town where men drive to, since there are so many lonely teen girls, and they ask men on the street for sex, basically anyone-and it's due to economics and a lack of things to do. Each and every time the girls were given something to do or some sort of realistic hope, instead of one of those Women Resource Center people giving them a feminist lecture ,that stopped too. > > > > I've been offered sex twice by 11 year old little girls-once at Coronado mall in ABQ, and once in West Virginia. Little girls NEVER asked me that in places that had jobs, or parents around. But that is all dependent on things beyond any parent's control. We left WV, as we were able to do so. I know people there now, even if it meant killing someone in cold blood, they would do it, just for a chance to leave. But money doesn't grow on trees, so they get stuck there, and have to go thru the above. > > > > > > > > > > When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom and had > > > to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while she > > > worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that child was > > > little he was never left alone to take care of himself; > > > > The average work week where we lived was 23 hours, the average pay, about 6$ an hour. Both parents worked at the employer's whim, otherwise you lost your job-only took two absences, for any reason ,to be fired. > > > > So given that rent averaged 500$ a month, how exactly would you work that, then? Utilities ran $100-400$ a month, too. And don't give me that thing about employer's listening to parents or working with them-I tried that, and so did everyone I knew, and no one ever had an amployer listen ever. If you were called at 2 pm, and told to come to work, you either did it or lost your job. Didn't matter if your kids were 6-8, and came home to an empty house, you still had to go, and the school refused to deliver messages too. And there was always some neighbor who would call the cops on you, unless you gave them food, sex, or something else to get them to shut up. My honey didn't have to do that, since I was there, and really got people like that into some serious problems with their own employers and the cops. But not everyone is quick as I am, went to college and took civil rights courses ,or has a 148 IQ, or prior experience with a nada, either. > > > > > > she made sure he had > > > interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and Scouting and > > > such when he was older. > > > > Martial arts courses are 100$ a month where I live, 60$ per person where I used to live, So how ,on the above work schedules and money would you do that? Hmm? You wouldn't. And when the cop showed up as he did with my cousin, Mr Whitey from Barboursville, and offered to get rid of her problems with the cops in return for sex, and he told her he had two girls that " looked like her " , and it was either that or lose them you'd be thinking twice too. People get pushed into situations like that. They don't choose them. And in some places like where I used to live, that is the only choice there is, at all. > > > > > > > > > > Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids alone > > > > You are a pretty self righteous person if after reading the above, you still think that, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself. All your nada-like judgment is not going to make money appear where it doesn't exist. And that is now the operative m.o. for most people, most parents, nationwide. > > > > > > and > > > unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge of " a > > > younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " a young > > > child that way. > > > > Well, when the 9$ an hour cps person shows up, you can explain to her why the kids are alone , and how there isn't any money. I'm sure that will make you feel good and self righteous to put someone down like that, as their kids get taken away. I saw that happen, which is why even now I will not report people to cps. They didn't do anything but terrorize anyone anyway. Only one person listened, and she helped us out, AND was made head of the local cps unit right afterwards too. But for the other people, who don't know what to do, your judgment won't help them one bit. > > > > Women like that need help, not judgment. As the Bible says, mercy triumphs over judgment. I saw what I saw, including blacks getting beat up and threatened by cops for no reason ,and I will die a liberal due to that. I was a white separatist at that time too. But I know better now, and know people are just people. They get into situations they can't help. Blacks were doing nothing where I lived, and I watched a white cop throw one kid down, draw a gun, and point it in his face. His anger grew (the kid's), and he started going after people for it. Displaced, repressed anger. He did NOT deserve that, and no one, not even the TV stations, would do anything about it. But no one needs some judgmental jerk like yourself putting them down, just because you think that since your mother got help from someone ,there are other people out there who will on command too. I know better. I will NEVER judge a woman raising kids for being stressed out ever again, no > > matter what. I have seen women get forced by cops into sex, and threatened, and no one, not even those stupid Women's Resource Center's people and such help them out. I helped them out, cuz I realized enough when I was a kid what it was like to be judged beyond belief, and will NEVER put another person down for that kind of hopeless hell or their inability to get what they need, ever again. NEVER. I learned something about that, and that was my nada was profoundly wrong to judge people in that way. Instead, I will just help them as I have always done. > > > > Being a light in the darkness is much more helpful than being the darkness holding a bucket of water for the candle. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 yeah, in my state parents just drive to work and leave their kids in the car to die. There are a LOT of cases like this here, no joke. This does not count the latch-key kids that are left home alone while their parents work. I am only working during the week, during school/after school care hours because that is all that I can afford but that also means that my work hours are limited. My employer does not like scheduling me only during the day and only during the week so my manager cuts my hours first whenever she needs to cut back on hours (our business is suffering due to the economy so a lot of hours have been cut.) I would not say that " most " parents are neglecting their children due to situations like this but there are a LOT of financially struggling parents out there so latch-key kids is probably a lot more common than anyone knows. ________________________________ To: WTOAdultChildren1 Sent: Sat, October 24, 2009 6:40:56 PM Subject: Re: nada negligence Yes,and being poor does not equate to being irresponsible in regards to arranging childcare for your children.Working parents find the best childcare they can afford.The availability of reasonably priced,decent childcare is a huge issue for many families but I seriously doubt that most of them are just throwing up their hands and resorting to leaving their kids unattended. > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > 8 and 6.. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > alone. > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 3:22:57 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > xrisacct@... writes: > > > > > > > I don't have kids either but the idea of leaving a six and eight year > old > > home alone together,even for a half an hour,is inconceivable to me. > > Unless you are independently wealthy, that is a fact of life for most > parents now. Most families don't have the support and organization members of > groups like the mormons do. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 This is not an issue that can be broad brushed on either side of the debate. Good points have been made about the difficulties, especially in the U.S., for finding good childcare when you have a low income, and the horrible dilemmas that many good-hearted low income parents are forced to make. But that does not negate the fact that leaving small children alone is not in the child's best interest, and can amount to neglect. There are abusive and neglectful parents on both ends of the financial spectrum, and all points in between, just as there are caring and responsible ones. The good parents with low income have it a lot tougher. I've been a welfare mom, with four small children, and have pretty much seen it all. Some parents are so beaten down by poverty that they do things that go against their basic values, like leaving their children home alone. Others are abusive and neglectful. One of the most depressing places on earth is the county welfare waiting room. My husband was left alone for long hours, in charge of his younger sister from the age of six. It was very frightening for him at times, and he still has emotional scars from the experience. A six year old doesn't have the cognitive ability to process a situation like that, and just feels the basic emotions of fear and loneliness. In my husband's case, his mother was leaving her children home because she went to the bars after work, but the effect would be the same no matter how legitimate the parent's situation. I also want to add that it would be nice if we had an agreement that even if we disagree, that telling someone " you sound just like my nada " is hitting below the belt. That's about the worst insult I can think of, and none of the good people on this board deserve to be disrespected like that. It's possible to disagree and remain polite. Kate > > > > > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > > 8 and 6. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > > alone. > > > That's a judgment, I lived the facts. Fact is, there is not. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 Well put thank you. I missed the comment about sounding just like a nada, but thank you for handling that as that is a very uncalled for thing to say on a board of KOs trying to heal from such severe childhood abuse and most of us struggling to be seperate people from our nadas. Kim > > > This is not an issue that can be broad brushed on either side of the debate. Good points have been made about the difficulties, especially in the U.S., for finding good childcare when you have a low income, and the horrible dilemmas that many good-hearted low income parents are forced to make. > > But that does not negate the fact that leaving small children alone is not in the child's best interest, and can amount to neglect. > > There are abusive and neglectful parents on both ends of the financial spectrum, and all points in between, just as there are caring and responsible ones. The good parents with low income have it a lot tougher. > > I've been a welfare mom, with four small children, and have pretty much seen it all. Some parents are so beaten down by poverty that they do things that go against their basic values, like leaving their children home alone. Others are abusive and neglectful. One of the most depressing places on earth is the county welfare waiting room. > > My husband was left alone for long hours, in charge of his younger sister from the age of six. It was very frightening for him at times, and he still has emotional scars from the experience. A six year old doesn't have the cognitive ability to process a situation like that, and just feels the basic emotions of fear and loneliness. In my husband's case, his mother was leaving her children home because she went to the bars after work, but the effect would be the same no matter how legitimate the parent's situation. > > I also want to add that it would be nice if we had an agreement that even if we disagree, that telling someone " you sound just like my nada " is hitting below the belt. That's about the worst insult I can think of, and none of the good people on this board deserve to be disrespected like that. > > It's possible to disagree and remain polite. > > Kate > > > > > > > > > > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > > > 8 and 6. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > > > alone. > > > > > > That's a judgment, I lived the facts. Fact is, there is not. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 I can agree with the more choices thing. I don't think it should ever be an option to leave children under 10 home alone under any circumstance. It's illegal, unsafe, dangerous and negligent. Our county has free childcare for those who qualify. I don't know that it's the most desirable place to leave a child, but it certainly beats leaving them alone. In a message dated 10/24/2009 8:54:35 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, kimmie827@... writes: People who shouldn't have kids, have them everyday. If it was as simple as people that aren't responsible just shouldn't have kids, I know I wouldn't be on this earth. So that's not a solution. Not that we are here to solve the ills of the world, but honestly, there's how things should be and how they are. Parents, responsible parents, are in need of MORE choices, so this type of situation NEVER happens. They are not in need of judgements, that do not help them or their children. ~Kim --- In _WTOAdultChildren1@WTOAdultChilWTO_ (mailto:WTOAdultChildren1 ) , Hummingbird1298@, Humm > > People who can't watch their kids and be responsible for them shouldn't > have them. If that's judgemental, then it is. The welfare of a child comes > first. > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 6:33:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > xrisacct@... writes: > > > > > > > > > I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible > parents do > > not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. > > Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for > their kids' > > safety and welfare. > > Where I lived ,there weren't any people willing to watch kids, and the > local tanf people would not pay money to people-they had to go out and get a > job. And no employer ever gave a break at all to any parent if their kid was > sick, or in trouble, or alone at home. My cousin lost 4 jobs i none year > due to that. It literally was do or die-people lost their kids due to the > fact no one would watch them. Add to that that the local grandparents had the > idea that the kids had to work out problems for themselves, and refused to > watch them, and they still can't do anything to make them help. > > > > > When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; > when > > elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus > home and > > stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my > Sister's > > age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know > whether my > > nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. > > But you had someone else willing-the majority of parents nationwide, > according to surveys over and over ,do not. > > You can be as judgmental as you want, but rent is still due at the first > week, and if there is no money, there's no place to live. And no one to > watch the kids. We watched over a dozen one day, simply because we had a > ridiculous amount of food ,were willing ,and the parents were screwed. When cops > and others tried to make trouble, I stood up for the kids and parents, and > they backed right down-they weren't used to someone knowing the actual laws > willing to fight back with a better vocabulary than they had, and they > just stood there staring, looking dumbfounded. The heck with them-if it's > surivival, I have stood up for anyone. And despite your judgment, that won't > make those people I helped out get a sitter no matter what. I knew what to do, > but even with that, only one woman was willing to watch my honey's kids, > since the laws changed right after Bush took office, and the 50+ people who > were willing, went down to two-and the other just simply said no, > despite being required by law, and there was nothing we could do. > > You sound like my nada-she always said there was a way, but I have never > found one, and neither ever did she, for most of the things she claimed did > have answers. That's just pure abuse-there are not good solutions for most > problems despite the rhetoric, and until there are, settling for second > best is pretty much what most people have to do. Quoting about your nada's > neighbor won't solve that either-we didn't, and neither did most of our > neighbors, have anyone to watch the kids. > > If a woman with 2 kids leaves them, and comes home 6 hours later and they > are fine, then she will do it again. She has no other choice in many places > in the U.S. > > At age 11 I was > > considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school > activities then > > walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. > > Where we lived, there are none, and the age of being able to watch onself > was 13. That means if a 12 year old answers the door when a jerk neighbor > calls the cops, then your kids are taken out of the home, and the cops don't > tell you where they are for up to 48 hours. > > It didn't happen to us, as we were fortunate. But it happened to enough > people, I stopped being judgmental like you, and realized no amount of > criticism would cause money to appear, and sitters to appear, for free, or even > to be available. > > Everyone seems to think working women are " magic " , and can make all that > happen without help or money, and I know better now. There aren't resources > for the majority of Americans anymore, or people helping so those problems > will keep happening. Alternet had an article about one Ohio town where men > drive to, since there are so many lonely teen girls, and they ask men on > the street for sex, basically anyone-and it's due to economics and a lack of > things to do. Each and every time the girls were given something to do or > some sort of realistic hope, instead of one of those Women Resource Center > people giving them a feminist lecture ,that stopped too. > > I've been offered sex twice by 11 year old little girls-once at Coronado > mall in ABQ, and once in West Virginia. Little girls NEVER asked me that in > places that had jobs, or parents around. But that is all dependent on > things beyond any parent's control. We left WV, as we were able to do so. I know > people there now, even if it meant killing someone in cold blood, they > would do it, just for a chance to leave. But money doesn't grow on trees, so > they get stuck there, and have to go thru the above. > > > > > When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom > and had > > to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while > she > > worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that > child was > > little he was never left alone to take care of himself; > > The average work week where we lived was 23 hours, the average pay, about > 6$ an hour. Both parents worked at the employer's whim, otherwise you lost > your job-only took two absences, for any reason ,to be fired. > > So given that rent averaged 500$ a month, how exactly would you work that, > then? Utilities ran $100-400$ a month, too. And don't give me that thing > about employer's listening to parents or working with them-I tried that, and > so did everyone I knew, and no one ever had an amployer listen ever. If > you were called at 2 pm, and told to come to work, you either did it or lost > your job. Didn't matter if your kids were 6-8, and came home to an empty > house, you still had to go, and the school refused to deliver messages too. > And there was always some neighbor who would call the cops on you, unless > you gave them food, sex, or something else to get them to shut up. My honey > didn't have to do that, since I was there, and really got people like that > into some serious problems with their own employers and the cops. But not > everyone is quick as I am, went to college and took civil rights courses ,or > has a 148 IQ, or prior experience with a nada, either. > > she made sure he had > > interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and > Scouting and > > such when he was older. > > Martial arts courses are 100$ a month where I live, 60$ per person where I > used to live, So how ,on the above work schedules and money would you do > that? Hmm? You wouldn't. And when the cop showed up as he did with my > cousin, Mr Whitey from Barboursville, and offered to get rid of her problems with > the cops in return for sex, and he told her he had two girls that " looked > like her " , and it was either that or lose them you'd be thinking twice too. > People get pushed into situations like that. They don't choose them. And > in some places like where I used to live, that is the only choice there is, > at all. > > > > > Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids > alone > > You are a pretty self righteous person if after reading the above, you > still think that, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself. All your nada-like > judgment is not going to make money appear where it doesn't exist. And that > is now the operative m.o. for most people, most parents, nationwide. > > and > > unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge > of " a > > younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " > a young > > child that way. > > Well, when the 9$ an hour cps person shows up, you can explain to her why > the kids are alone , and how there isn't any money. I'm sure that will make > you feel good and self righteous to put someone down like that, as their > kids get taken away. I saw that happen, which is why even now I will not > report people to cps. They didn't do anything but terrorize anyone anyway. > Only one person listened, and she helped us out, AND was made head of the > local cps unit right afterwards too. But for the other people, who don't know > what to do, your judgment won't help them one bit. > > Women like that need help, not judgment. As the Bible says, mercy triumphs > over judgment. I saw what I saw, including blacks getting beat up and > threatened by cops for no reason ,and I will die a liberal due to that. I was a > white separatist at that time too. But I know better now, and know people > are just people. They get into situations they can't help. Blacks were > doing nothing where I lived, and I watched a white cop throw one kid down, draw > a gun, and point it in his face. His anger grew (the kid's), and he > started going after people for it. Displaced, repressed anger. He did NOT deserve > that, and no one, not even the TV stations, would do anything about it. > But no one needs some judgmental jerk like yourself putting them down, just > because you think that since your mother got help from someone ,there are > other people out there who will on command too. I know better. I will NEVER > judge a woman raising kids for being stressed out ever again, no > matter what. I have seen women get forced by cops into sex, and > threatened, and no one, not even those stupid Women's Resource Center's people and > such help them out. I helped them out, cuz I realized enough when I was a kid > what it was like to be judged beyond belief, and will NEVER put another > person down for that kind of hopeless hell or their inability to get what they > need, ever again. NEVER. I learned something about that, and that was my > nada was profoundly wrong to judge people in that way. Instead, I will just > help them as I have always done. > > Being a light in the darkness is much more helpful than being the darkness > holding a bucket of water for the candle. > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 I agree that the childcare situation for working parents in this country is a national disgrace.I believe that leaving impoverished single mothers to sort out childcare when they are not making ends meet and cannot spare that extra money to pay for adequate childcare is akin to abandonment/abuse of children by the state,not the mother. I know it's rough out there.I can only go by the women I know who have been in these rough situations yet never left their kids alone.I don't personally know anyone who did that--they always found someone,even if it was way less than ideal: having another mother who was on welfare watch their kids; having a teenaged cousin live with them...and worrying about it all the time...and having to prostitute themselves in some cases to pay for childcare.But I don't personally know anyone who ever left their kids alone,no matter how dire their circumstances. My original point was that just because someone is poor doesn't mean they will make irresponsible choices for their childrens' care.To me,the one doesn't follow the other.I have personally known women who have had to debase themselves in order to provide for their kids,because they had no other alternative.That is more wrong than I can even express,that our society is set up this way for some.All of these women had abuse histories.And they were not nadas--they loved their children and were trying to do better by them than their own mothers had done by them.They wanted their kids to get out of the poverty cycle. That is my personal experience and if yours is different,it is.I think we can both agree that no mother/no child should have to live that way. > > > > > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > > > 8 and 6. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > > > alone. > > > > > > > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 3:22:57 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > > > xrisacct@ writes: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I don't have kids either but the idea of leaving a six and eight year > > > old > > > > home alone together,even for a half an hour,is inconceivable to me. > > > > > > Unless you are independently wealthy, that is a fact of life for most > > > parents now. Most families don't have the support and organization members of > > > groups like the mormons do. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 Yes,thank you,Kate,for sounding in with this: " telling someone 'you sound just like my nada' is hitting below the belt. " Excellently well said! We are not going to always agree with eachother here,but it is important to be mindful of respectfully disagreeing if you feel like you really have to respond.We need this board to be a safe place where we are sharing,not tearing eachother down.We've all had enough of that. > > > This is not an issue that can be broad brushed on either side of the debate. Good points have been made about the difficulties, especially in the U.S., for finding good childcare when you have a low income, and the horrible dilemmas that many good-hearted low income parents are forced to make. > > But that does not negate the fact that leaving small children alone is not in the child's best interest, and can amount to neglect. > > There are abusive and neglectful parents on both ends of the financial spectrum, and all points in between, just as there are caring and responsible ones. The good parents with low income have it a lot tougher. > > I've been a welfare mom, with four small children, and have pretty much seen it all. Some parents are so beaten down by poverty that they do things that go against their basic values, like leaving their children home alone. Others are abusive and neglectful. One of the most depressing places on earth is the county welfare waiting room. > > My husband was left alone for long hours, in charge of his younger sister from the age of six. It was very frightening for him at times, and he still has emotional scars from the experience. A six year old doesn't have the cognitive ability to process a situation like that, and just feels the basic emotions of fear and loneliness. In my husband's case, his mother was leaving her children home because she went to the bars after work, but the effect would be the same no matter how legitimate the parent's situation. > > I also want to add that it would be nice if we had an agreement that even if we disagree, that telling someone " you sound just like my nada " is hitting below the belt. That's about the worst insult I can think of, and none of the good people on this board deserve to be disrespected like that. > > It's possible to disagree and remain polite. > > Kate > > > > > > > > > > > I don't think there is any excuse in the book for leaving children alone at > > > 8 and 6. Even poor people can make better choices than to leave their kids > > > alone. > > > > > > That's a judgment, I lived the facts. Fact is, there is not. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 People who shouldn't have kids, have them everyday. If it was as simple as people that aren't responsible just shouldn't have kids, I know I wouldn't be on this earth. So that's not a solution. Not that we are here to solve the ills of the world, but honestly, there's how things should be and how they are. Parents, responsible parents, are in need of MORE choices, so this type of situation NEVER happens. They are not in need of judgements, that do not help them or their children. ~Kim > > People who can't watch their kids and be responsible for them shouldn't > have them. If that's judgemental, then it is. The welfare of a child comes > first. > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 6:33:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > xrisacct@... writes: > > > > > > > > > I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible > parents do > > not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. > > Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for > their kids' > > safety and welfare. > > Where I lived ,there weren't any people willing to watch kids, and the > local tanf people would not pay money to people-they had to go out and get a > job. And no employer ever gave a break at all to any parent if their kid was > sick, or in trouble, or alone at home. My cousin lost 4 jobs i none year > due to that. It literally was do or die-people lost their kids due to the > fact no one would watch them. Add to that that the local grandparents had the > idea that the kids had to work out problems for themselves, and refused to > watch them, and they still can't do anything to make them help. > > > > > When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; > when > > elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school bus > home and > > stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my > Sister's > > age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know > whether my > > nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. > > But you had someone else willing-the majority of parents nationwide, > according to surveys over and over ,do not. > > You can be as judgmental as you want, but rent is still due at the first > week, and if there is no money, there's no place to live. And no one to > watch the kids. We watched over a dozen one day, simply because we had a > ridiculous amount of food ,were willing ,and the parents were screwed. When cops > and others tried to make trouble, I stood up for the kids and parents, and > they backed right down-they weren't used to someone knowing the actual laws > willing to fight back with a better vocabulary than they had, and they > just stood there staring, looking dumbfounded. The heck with them-if it's > surivival, I have stood up for anyone. And despite your judgment, that won't > make those people I helped out get a sitter no matter what. I knew what to do, > but even with that, only one woman was willing to watch my honey's kids, > since the laws changed right after Bush took office, and the 50+ people who > were willing, went down to two-and the other just simply said no, > despite being required by law, and there was nothing we could do. > > You sound like my nada-she always said there was a way, but I have never > found one, and neither ever did she, for most of the things she claimed did > have answers. That's just pure abuse-there are not good solutions for most > problems despite the rhetoric, and until there are, settling for second > best is pretty much what most people have to do. Quoting about your nada's > neighbor won't solve that either-we didn't, and neither did most of our > neighbors, have anyone to watch the kids. > > If a woman with 2 kids leaves them, and comes home 6 hours later and they > are fine, then she will do it again. She has no other choice in many places > in the U.S. > > At age 11 I was > > considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school > activities then > > walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. > > Where we lived, there are none, and the age of being able to watch onself > was 13. That means if a 12 year old answers the door when a jerk neighbor > calls the cops, then your kids are taken out of the home, and the cops don't > tell you where they are for up to 48 hours. > > It didn't happen to us, as we were fortunate. But it happened to enough > people, I stopped being judgmental like you, and realized no amount of > criticism would cause money to appear, and sitters to appear, for free, or even > to be available. > > Everyone seems to think working women are " magic " , and can make all that > happen without help or money, and I know better now. There aren't resources > for the majority of Americans anymore, or people helping so those problems > will keep happening. Alternet had an article about one Ohio town where men > drive to, since there are so many lonely teen girls, and they ask men on > the street for sex, basically anyone-and it's due to economics and a lack of > things to do. Each and every time the girls were given something to do or > some sort of realistic hope, instead of one of those Women Resource Center > people giving them a feminist lecture ,that stopped too. > > I've been offered sex twice by 11 year old little girls-once at Coronado > mall in ABQ, and once in West Virginia. Little girls NEVER asked me that in > places that had jobs, or parents around. But that is all dependent on > things beyond any parent's control. We left WV, as we were able to do so. I know > people there now, even if it meant killing someone in cold blood, they > would do it, just for a chance to leave. But money doesn't grow on trees, so > they get stuck there, and have to go thru the above. > > > > > When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom > and had > > to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while > she > > worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that > child was > > little he was never left alone to take care of himself; > > The average work week where we lived was 23 hours, the average pay, about > 6$ an hour. Both parents worked at the employer's whim, otherwise you lost > your job-only took two absences, for any reason ,to be fired. > > So given that rent averaged 500$ a month, how exactly would you work that, > then? Utilities ran $100-400$ a month, too. And don't give me that thing > about employer's listening to parents or working with them-I tried that, and > so did everyone I knew, and no one ever had an amployer listen ever. If > you were called at 2 pm, and told to come to work, you either did it or lost > your job. Didn't matter if your kids were 6-8, and came home to an empty > house, you still had to go, and the school refused to deliver messages too. > And there was always some neighbor who would call the cops on you, unless > you gave them food, sex, or something else to get them to shut up. My honey > didn't have to do that, since I was there, and really got people like that > into some serious problems with their own employers and the cops. But not > everyone is quick as I am, went to college and took civil rights courses ,or > has a 148 IQ, or prior experience with a nada, either. > > she made sure he had > > interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and > Scouting and > > such when he was older. > > Martial arts courses are 100$ a month where I live, 60$ per person where I > used to live, So how ,on the above work schedules and money would you do > that? Hmm? You wouldn't. And when the cop showed up as he did with my > cousin, Mr Whitey from Barboursville, and offered to get rid of her problems with > the cops in return for sex, and he told her he had two girls that " looked > like her " , and it was either that or lose them you'd be thinking twice too. > People get pushed into situations like that. They don't choose them. And > in some places like where I used to live, that is the only choice there is, > at all. > > > > > Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids > alone > > You are a pretty self righteous person if after reading the above, you > still think that, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself. All your nada-like > judgment is not going to make money appear where it doesn't exist. And that > is now the operative m.o. for most people, most parents, nationwide. > > and > > unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge > of " a > > younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to " parentify " > a young > > child that way. > > Well, when the 9$ an hour cps person shows up, you can explain to her why > the kids are alone , and how there isn't any money. I'm sure that will make > you feel good and self righteous to put someone down like that, as their > kids get taken away. I saw that happen, which is why even now I will not > report people to cps. They didn't do anything but terrorize anyone anyway. > Only one person listened, and she helped us out, AND was made head of the > local cps unit right afterwards too. But for the other people, who don't know > what to do, your judgment won't help them one bit. > > Women like that need help, not judgment. As the Bible says, mercy triumphs > over judgment. I saw what I saw, including blacks getting beat up and > threatened by cops for no reason ,and I will die a liberal due to that. I was a > white separatist at that time too. But I know better now, and know people > are just people. They get into situations they can't help. Blacks were > doing nothing where I lived, and I watched a white cop throw one kid down, draw > a gun, and point it in his face. His anger grew (the kid's), and he > started going after people for it. Displaced, repressed anger. He did NOT deserve > that, and no one, not even the TV stations, would do anything about it. > But no one needs some judgmental jerk like yourself putting them down, just > because you think that since your mother got help from someone ,there are > other people out there who will on command too. I know better. I will NEVER > judge a woman raising kids for being stressed out ever again, no > matter what. I have seen women get forced by cops into sex, and > threatened, and no one, not even those stupid Women's Resource Center's people and > such help them out. I helped them out, cuz I realized enough when I was a kid > what it was like to be judged beyond belief, and will NEVER put another > person down for that kind of hopeless hell or their inability to get what they > need, ever again. NEVER. I learned something about that, and that was my > nada was profoundly wrong to judge people in that way. Instead, I will just > help them as I have always done. > > Being a light in the darkness is much more helpful than being the darkness > holding a bucket of water for the candle. > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 24, 2009 Report Share Posted October 24, 2009 Ashana,I'm sure that it's what your nada did not say that made a difference to how you processed this incident,which from the sounds of it,was on your own. > > , > > Thank you so much for your post, for taking the time and for your compassion. > > I think after I cut the cat, I mostly felt numb, and underneath that, I think I was terrified. I did not know what kinds of things can kill someone, but I understood that living creatures can die. I had been to one or two funerals by then, and I understood that certain things can happen that will make you lie down and close your eyes and that after that you won't ever open them again. > > I also knew that my own cuts and scratches healed, but I don't think I connected that to the deep cut I saw in my cat--which exposed his fat in a way that just did not seem right at all to me. I don't think I knew that even deep cuts like that can be closed up and that they can heal. > > I have no idea what my mom did or said after it happened. I don't think she said anything very important. I think it is what she did not say that made a difference. > > Best, > Ashana > > > Add whatever you love to the Yahoo! India homepage. Try now! http://in.yahoo.com/trynew > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2009 Report Share Posted October 25, 2009 I'm not sure what any of this has to do with the idea that leaving children under 10 home alone is unsafe. While your childhood sounds horrid, so have all of ours been and we can't compare " Oh, my childhood was worse than yours because I had to do so and so and you didn't. " It's not like that at all. I don't know how old you are, but it doesn't change the fact that leaving children unattended before they're mature enough or old enough to be is dangerous. And yes, there ARE other options if people investigate them. They may not always be desirable options, but leaving a child in free county daycare would, in my opinion, be a much better choice than leaving them alone. I don't know why you feel it's defendable. It really isn't. I mean, I grew up with a single mother who left me with an uncle would sexually abused me. Was that her only option? NO! It was not. In a message dated 10/25/2009 8:07:37 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, kimmie827@... writes: I want to explain that this thread hit a sore nerve, and why. That same feeling of how people who did not have a nada, have their ideas that we should forgive and forget, or " its your mother " (I hate that phrase) and we KNOW that because these people did not walk in our shoes they can not even begin to comprehend what it was like. Worse, I find it hurtful and frustrating when people assume they know how it was, and compare their childhood to mine, by saying things like " my mother hit me a few times " or acting like their mother " had her moments too " . We all know one of the frustrating things about BPD, is its not just about one incident, but a childhood of not just physical but pyschological abuse, and that someone on the outside looking in will never get it. When things are said like people that can't be responsible for their kids shouldnt have them, or there's free childcare available, it floods me with the same feeling, ONLY I also grew up in poverty. I've lived in poor, welfare neighborhoods, motels and in homeless shelters growing up. I've stolen food to eat as a child. And while I don't know your financial situation growing up, it sounds as though you have not experienced that kind of dire need to survive. And when I hear you pass judgement on a life you don't seem to understand it gives me that same feeling as people that think they know what living with nada was like. Also when people who have not walked in our shoes have their " solutions " like " just try being nicer to your mother " or " don't bring up subjects that start fights " because normal adult children, I'm sure disagree with their parents at times, and they just avoid those topics (politics for example). What people with normal parent don't understand is it NEVER that simple. When you say there's free childcare for people who qualify, I get the same sick feeling because its NEVER that simple. NEVER. I hate to compare this to being a KO but thats the only way I can think to explain it. Living in poverty is something that you can only understand if you've been there. And just as people who say " my mother hit me growing up and I'm fine " try to compare their mothers to my nada...it goes the same way with people who tell me " oh well we had hand me downs growing up, yeah we were poor too. " Ok that's not poor. I shoplifted most of my clothes until I was 15 and old enough to get a job and even then, my nada would keep my weeks pay anyway, so most of the time I'd work all week (either after school ,or days in the summer) and never see a dime. So I still shoplifted for school clothes and supplies. And you know what? Its actually easier to shoplift from 2nd time around shops than malls and department stores. Unfortuanely I was still growing in my teens, so I needed larger clothes from time to time. I also have permenantly deformed toes from wearing shoes too long as my feet grew. They are pulled in together, and they toe nails grow pointing in, like a minor case of chinese foot binding. I hope I've made this clear. This thread has made me so upset that I'm considering taking a break from this site, which I just came back to after a break, for personal reasons. I don't come here to hear other think they know what other people's lives are like and pass judgement on them. While I don't agree with leaving small kids home alone. Obviously, its dangerous, and Children's Services would get involved in something like that, this thread hit to close to home for me with people who have never walked in other people's shoes, making judgements about theit character. Like I said, I've shoplifted food and clothing, and more than that. Are you going to judge me as a theft? As a horrible person? Or do you take circumstance into consideration? ~Kim --- In _WTOAdultChildren1@WTOAdultChilWTO_ (mailto:WTOAdultChildren1 ) , Hummingbird1298@, Humm > > I can agree with the more choices thing. I don't think it should ever be > an option to leave children under 10 home alone under any circumstance. It's > illegal, unsafe, dangerous and negligent. Our county has free childcare for > those who qualify. I don't know that it's the most desirable place to > leave a child, but it certainly beats leaving them alone. > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 8:54:35 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > kimmie827@.. kimmie82 > > > > > People who shouldn't have kids, have them everyday. If it was as simple as > people that aren't responsible just shouldn't have kids, I know I wouldn't > be on this earth. So that's not a solution. Not that we are here to solve > the ills of the world, but honestly, there's how things should be and how > they are. Parents, responsible parents, are in need of MORE choices, so this > type of situation NEVER happens. They are not in need of judgements, that > do not help them or their children. > ~Kim > --- In _WTOAdultChildren1@ --- In _WTOAdultChil > (mailto:_WTOAdultChildren1@WTOAdultChilWTO_ (mailto:WTOAdultChildren1 ) ) , Hummingbird1298@) > > > > People who can't watch their kids and be responsible for them shouldn't > > have them. If that's judgemental, then it is. The welfare of a child > comes > > first. > > > > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 6:33:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > > xrisacct@ writes: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible > > parents do > > > not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. > > > Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for > > their kids' > > > safety and welfare. > > > > Where I lived ,there weren't any people willing to watch kids, and the > > local tanf people would not pay money to people-they had to go out and > get a > > job. And no employer ever gave a break at all to any parent if their kid > was > > sick, or in trouble, or alone at home. My cousin lost 4 jobs i none year > > due to that. It literally was do or die-people lost their kids due to > the > > fact no one would watch them. Add to that that the local grandparents > had the > > idea that the kids had to work out problems for themselves, and refused > to > > watch them, and they still can't do anything to make them help. > > > > > > > > When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working again; > > when > > > elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school > bus > > home and > > > stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my > > Sister's > > > age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know > > whether my > > > nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. > > > > But you had someone else willing-the majority of parents nationwide, > > according to surveys over and over ,do not. > > > > You can be as judgmental as you want, but rent is still due at the first > > week, and if there is no money, there's no place to live. And no one to > > watch the kids. We watched over a dozen one day, simply because we had a > > ridiculous amount of food ,were willing ,and the parents were screwed. > When cops > > and others tried to make trouble, I stood up for the kids and parents, > and > > they backed right down-they weren't used to someone knowing the actual > laws > > willing to fight back with a better vocabulary than they had, and they > > just stood there staring, looking dumbfounded. The heck with them-if > it's > > surivival, I have stood up for anyone. And despite your judgment, that > won't > > make those people I helped out get a sitter no matter what. I knew what > to do, > > but even with that, only one woman was willing to watch my honey's kids, > > since the laws changed right after Bush took office, and the 50+ people > who > > were willing, went down to two-and the other just simply said no, > > despite being required by law, and there was nothing we could do. > > > > You sound like my nada-she always said there was a way, but I have never > > found one, and neither ever did she, for most of the things she claimed > did > > have answers. That's just pure abuse-there are not good solutions for > most > > problems despite the rhetoric, and until there are, settling for second > > best is pretty much what most people have to do. Quoting about your > nada's > > neighbor won't solve that either-we didn't, and neither did most of our > > neighbors, have anyone to watch the kids. > > > > If a woman with 2 kids leaves them, and comes home 6 hours later and > they > > are fine, then she will do it again. She has no other choice in many > places > > in the U.S. > > > > At age 11 I was > > > considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school > > activities then > > > walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. > > > > Where we lived, there are none, and the age of being able to watch > onself > > was 13. That means if a 12 year old answers the door when a jerk > neighbor > > calls the cops, then your kids are taken out of the home, and the cops > don't > > tell you where they are for up to 48 hours. > > > > It didn't happen to us, as we were fortunate. But it happened to enough > > people, I stopped being judgmental like you, and realized no amount of > > criticism would cause money to appear, and sitters to appear, for free, > or even > > to be available. > > > > Everyone seems to think working women are " magic " , and can make all > that > > happen without help or money, and I know better now. There aren't > resources > > for the majority of Americans anymore, or people helping so those > problems > > will keep happening. Alternet had an article about one Ohio town where > men > > drive to, since there are so many lonely teen girls, and they ask men on > > the street for sex, basically anyone-and it's due to economics and a > lack of > > things to do. Each and every time the girls were given something to do > or > > some sort of realistic hope, instead of one of those Women Resource > Center > > people giving them a feminist lecture ,that stopped too. > > > > I've been offered sex twice by 11 year old little girls-once at Coronado > > mall in ABQ, and once in West Virginia. Little girls NEVER asked me that > in > > places that had jobs, or parents around. But that is all dependent on > > things beyond any parent's control. We left WV, as we were able to do > so. I know > > people there now, even if it meant killing someone in cold blood, they > > would do it, just for a chance to leave. But money doesn't grow on > trees, so > > they get stuck there, and have to go thru the above. > > > > > > > > When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single mom > > and had > > > to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy while > > she > > > worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when that > > child was > > > little he was never left alone to take care of himself; > > > > The average work week where we lived was 23 hours, the average pay, > about > > 6$ an hour. Both parents worked at the employer's whim, otherwise you > lost > > your job-only took two absences, for any reason ,to be fired. > > > > So given that rent averaged 500$ a month, how exactly would you work > that, > > then? Utilities ran $100-400$ a month, too. And don't give me that thing > > about employer's listening to parents or working with them-I tried that, > and > > so did everyone I knew, and no one ever had an amployer listen ever. If > > you were called at 2 pm, and told to come to work, you either did it or > lost > > your job. Didn't matter if your kids were 6-8, and came home to an empty > > house, you still had to go, and the school refused to deliver messages > too. > > And there was always some neighbor who would call the cops on you, > unless > > you gave them food, sex, or something else to get them to shut up. My > honey > > didn't have to do that, since I was there, and really got people like > that > > into some serious problems with their own employers and the cops. But > not > > everyone is quick as I am, went to college and took civil rights courses > ,or > > has a 148 IQ, or prior experience with a nada, either. > > > > she made sure he had > > > interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and > > Scouting and > > > such when he was older. > > > > Martial arts courses are 100$ a month where I live, 60$ per person where > I > > used to live, So how ,on the above work schedules and money would you do > > that? Hmm? You wouldn't. And when the cop showed up as he did with my > > cousin, Mr Whitey from Barboursville, and offered to get rid of her > problems with > > the cops in return for sex, and he told her he had two girls that > " looked > > like her " , and it was either that or lose them you'd be thinking twice > too. > > People get pushed into situations like that. They don't choose them. And > > in some places like where I used to live, that is the only choice there > is, > > at all. > > > > > > > > Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little kids > > alone > > > > You are a pretty self righteous person if after reading the above, you > > still think that, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself. All your > nada-like > > judgment is not going to make money appear where it doesn't exist. And > that > > is now the operative m.o. for most people, most parents, nationwide. > > > > and > > > unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in charge > > of " a > > > younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to > " parentify " > > a young > > > child that way. > > > > Well, when the 9$ an hour cps person shows up, you can explain to her > why > > the kids are alone , and how there isn't any money. I'm sure that will > make > > you feel good and self righteous to put someone down like that, as their > > kids get taken away. I saw that happen, which is why even now I will not > > report people to cps. They didn't do anything but terrorize anyone > anyway. > > Only one person listened, and she helped us out, AND was made head of > the > > local cps unit right afterwards too. But for the other people, who don't > know > > what to do, your judgment won't help them one bit. > > > > Women like that need help, not judgment. As the Bible says, mercy > triumphs > > over judgment. I saw what I saw, including blacks getting beat up and > > threatened by cops for no reason ,and I will die a liberal due to that. > I was a > > white separatist at that time too. But I know better now, and know > people > > are just people. They get into situations they can't help. Blacks were > > doing nothing where I lived, and I watched a white cop throw one kid > down, draw > > a gun, and point it in his face. His anger grew (the kid's), and he > > started going after people for it. Displaced, repressed anger. He did > NOT deserve > > that, and no one, not even the TV stations, would do anything about it. > > But no one needs some judgmental jerk like yourself putting them down, > just > > because you think that since your mother got help from someone ,there > are > > other people out there who will on command too. I know better. I will > NEVER > > judge a woman raising kids for being stressed out ever again, no > > matter what. I have seen women get forced by cops into sex, and > > threatened, and no one, not even those stupid Women's Resource Center's > people and > > such help them out. I helped them out, cuz I realized enough when I was > a kid > > what it was like to be judged beyond belief, and will NEVER put another > > person down for that kind of hopeless hell or their inability to get > what they > > need, ever again. NEVER. I learned something about that, and that was my > > nada was profoundly wrong to judge people in that way. Instead, I will > just > > help them as I have always done. > > > > Being a light in the darkness is much more helpful than being the > darkness > > holding a bucket of water for the candle. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2009 Report Share Posted October 25, 2009 There's a big difference in finding work to support yourself (which is legal) and leaving kids unattended alone. This is apples and oranges. No where in this post did I see irresponsibility or negligence. Was it a job you wanted to do? Maybe not, but you did what you had to do to support your family and be a good mother. I see that as admirable, not something to be ashamed of. And if your npd ex is telling your girls, then if they're teenagers, hopefully they can understand WHY you did what you did. Still, this is a far cry from people who leave kids ALONE which was what prompted my comment that there were many more options out there if people investigated it. Someone said (basically) that it was okay to leave kids alone if they were poor and had no other choice and I said, no, that's not okay no matter what you're income level is because there are too many other options this day in time (and perhaps there should be MORE) than to leave your kids in danger. Aside from the fact that it's dangerous for the child, it's illegal. There are other choices out there. There are people, organizations, churches, government programs, etc....that help. There are some companies that have daycares. I have been watching this poor mother on the news whose daughter was kidnapped and murdered in Florida. She was allowing her 7 year old to walk home from school an entire mile. Her daughter was with other children, but had run ahead because of an argument and when she was taken she was alone. She said she told her kids about " stranger danger " and told them what to do if anyone ever tried to kidnap them. She told them to stay together in groups. But in the end, it was all for nothing. There was no adult supervision and now her precious baby is dead because some sicko out there was in the wrong place at the wrong time. The moral of this story, though, is that you can't trust a child who is 7 or 8 years old to do the right thing. I can't tell you how many times I have told my kids if I am in the shower or another room in the house, do NOT open the door if someone rings the doorbell and I can't tell you how many times they have done just that. Kids that age are not mature enough to make appropriate decisions. That's why they require supervision. It's sad, but this day in time it's not appropriate and there is really no reason for it. In a message dated 10/25/2009 9:25:57 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, ronandkim454@... writes: I would like to respond to the person who commented that people who can't be responsible shouldn't have children. In my experience, situations can change drastically over time and you just don't know what your life may be after a divorce or a job loss for example. As a mom sometimes you are caught between a rock and a hard place. I had 5 young kids when my npd ex and I divorced. We had joint legal and physical custody because he didn't want to pay child support and we were to equally share expenses. I was working my tail off - my babies were with a sitter and then their dad all the time. I couldn't take them to the grocery store because I could only buy specific things with so little money and I felt so torn having to always say no about every little thing I went to work as an " exotic dancer " at age 34 so that I could only work on the nights the kids were with my ex. It was the hardest thing to do but i was desperate. I was able to get them the things they needed and not have a sitter. Now 10 years later I am remarried to a wonderful man but my past job haunts me as my npd ex is telling my now teenage daughters about it. I guess my point is - sometimes people make questionable choices in an effort to be a good mom. It's hard work - it's terrifying to be unable to support your children and it's sad that there aren't more resources available. Sent from my iPhone Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2009 Report Share Posted October 25, 2009 I really don't get what you're defending. I never said every parent who did that was bad, horrible, or anything of the sort. It doesn't really matter if the parent FEELS it's a good option to leave a small child alone. It doesn't make it so. It's still negligence. My mother felt it was a good idea to leave me with an uncle who abused me. NOT defendable. And I said MY county had free childcare to parents who qualify. I'm not sure why that's insulting. I would think it would be much more insulting to have to leave your child alone. In a message dated 10/25/2009 9:43:08 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, kimmie827@... writes: You know what, you're just not getting what I'm saying. I don't come to this board to explain myself over and over. I said it was dangerous. I'm not defending it, I'm defending that you feel you have the right to make a general assumption about the character of every parent. I know I wrote a long post, but obviously you didn't read it. And to sit there and say I'm trying to compare whose childhood was worse, is stupid. You've really pushed one of my buttons. I don't know where you get this idea that there are just free childcare places, to drop kids off??? I've said several times that I don NOT agree with leaving young children home alone. But then some people made the jump to say ANY parent that does that is a bad parent, an other choice words. What some people here are trying to say, is there are, SOMETIMES situations that GOOD, RESPONSIBLE parents that feel bad about their choice, leave there kids alone, but do it because they feel there are no other options. And for you to say there's free childcare is INSULTING! ITs so incredibly insulting that you think all these parents are just morons that haven't checked out all the other optionss for their child, but if YOU were in that situation you'd have all the answers. Its arrogant. I need to find an ignore button for you. I don't care how mean that sounds. I'm generally a peaceful person, but you are one of my triggers. Someone that just knows without experience how you would solve the problems, so anyone that doesn't do what you're suggesting MUST just be a bad parent. It can't possibly be that you are wrong and that free child care isn't always available? Or what about parents that can only find evening work when THERE ARE NOT DAYCARES OPEN?? What's the solution to that? And what the hell does my age have to do with it? Are you now assuming that either young people or old people somehow don't have valid opinions? Thank you for making this website another source of anxiety for me. ~Kim --- In _WTOAdultChildren1@WTOAdultChilWTO_ (mailto:WTOAdultChildren1 ) , Hummingbird1298@, Humm > > I'm not sure what any of this has to do with the idea that leaving children > under 10 home alone is unsafe. While your childhood sounds horrid, so have > all of ours been and we can't compare " Oh, my childhood was worse than > yours because I had to do so and so and you didn't. " It's not like that at > all. I don't know how old you are, but it doesn't change the fact that > leaving children unattended before they're mature enough or old enough to be is > dangerous. And yes, there ARE other options if people investigate them. > They may not always be desirable options, but leaving a child in free county > daycare would, in my opinion, be a much better choice than leaving them > alone. I don't know why you feel it's defendable. It really isn't. I mean, > I grew up with a single mother who left me with an uncle would sexually > abused me. Was that her only option? NO! It was not. > > > In a message dated 10/25/2009 8:07:37 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > kimmie827@.. kimmie82 > > > > > I want to explain that this thread hit a sore nerve, and why. That same > feeling of how people who did not have a nada, have their ideas that we should > forgive and forget, or " its your mother " (I hate that phrase) and we KNOW > that because these people did not walk in our shoes they can not even begin > to comprehend what it was like. > Worse, I find it hurtful and frustrating when people assume they know how > it was, and compare their childhood to mine, by saying things like " my > mother hit me a few times " or acting like their mother " had her moments too " . > We all know one of the frustrating things about BPD, is its not just about > one incident, but a childhood of not just physical but pyschological abuse, > and that someone on the outside looking in will never get it. > > When things are said like people that can't be responsible for their kids > shouldnt have them, or there's free childcare available, it floods me with > the same feeling, ONLY I also grew up in poverty. I've lived in poor, > welfare neighborhoods, motels and in homeless shelters growing up. I've stolen > food to eat as a child. And while I don't know your financial situation > growing up, it sounds as though you have not experienced that kind of dire need > to survive. And when I hear you pass judgement on a life you don't seem to > understand it gives me that same feeling as people that think they know > what living with nada was like. > > Also when people who have not walked in our shoes have their " solutions " > like " just try being nicer to your mother " or " don't bring up subjects that > start fights " because normal adult children, I'm sure disagree with their > parents at times, and they just avoid those topics (politics for example). > What people with normal parent don't understand is it NEVER that simple. > > When you say there's free childcare for people who qualify, I get the same > sick feeling because its NEVER that simple. NEVER. > > I hate to compare this to being a KO but thats the only way I can think to > explain it. Living in poverty is something that you can only understand if > you've been there. And just as people who say " my mother hit me growing up > and I'm fine " try to compare their mothers to my nada...it goes the same > way with people who tell me " oh well we had hand me downs growing up, yeah > we were poor too. " Ok that's not poor. I shoplifted most of my clothes until > I was 15 and old enough to get a job and even then, my nada would keep my > weeks pay anyway, so most of the time I'd work all week (either after > school ,or days in the summer) and never see a dime. > So I still shoplifted for school clothes and supplies. And you know what? > Its actually easier to shoplift from 2nd time around shops than malls and > department stores. Unfortuanely I was still growing in my teens, so I needed > larger clothes from time to time. I also have permenantly deformed toes > from wearing shoes too long as my feet grew. They are pulled in together, and > they toe nails grow pointing in, like a minor case of chinese foot binding. > > I hope I've made this clear. This thread has made me so upset that I'm > considering taking a break from this site, which I just came back to after a > break, for personal reasons. I don't come here to hear other think they know > what other people's lives are like and pass judgement on them. While I > don't agree with leaving small kids home alone. Obviously, its dangerous, and > Children's Services would get involved in something like that, this thread > hit to close to home for me with people who have never walked in other > people's shoes, making judgements about theit character. Like I said, I've > shoplifted food and clothing, and more than that. Are you going to judge me as > a theft? As a horrible person? Or do you take circumstance into > consideration? > > ~Kim > > --- In _WTOAdultChildren1@ --- In _WTOA > (mailto:_WTOAdultChildren1@WTOAdultChilWTO_ (mailto:WTOAdultChildren1 ) ) , Hummingbird1298@) > > > > I can agree with the more choices thing. I don't think it should ever be > > an option to leave children under 10 home alone under any circumstance. > It's > > illegal, unsafe, dangerous and negligent. Our county has free childcare > for > > those who qualify. I don't know that it's the most desirable place to > > leave a child, but it certainly beats leaving them alone. > > > > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 8:54:35 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > > kimmie827@ kimmie82 > > > > > > > > > > People who shouldn't have kids, have them everyday. If it was as simple > as > > people that aren't responsible just shouldn't have kids, I know I > wouldn't > > be on this earth. So that's not a solution. Not that we are here to > solve > > the ills of the world, but honestly, there's how things should be and > how > > they are. Parents, responsible parents, are in need of MORE choices, so > this > > type of situation NEVER happens. They are not in need of judgements, > that > > do not help them or their children. > > ~Kim > > --- In _WTOAdultChildren1@ --- In _WTOAdultChil > > (mailto:_WTOAdultCh (mailto:_WT (mai > (mailto:_WTOAdultChildren1@WTOAdultChilWTO_ (mailto:WTOAdultChildren1 ) ) ) , Hummingbird1298@) > > > > > > People who can't watch their kids and be responsible for them > shouldn't > > > have them. If that's judgemental, then it is. The welfare of a child > > comes > > > first. > > > > > > > > > In a message dated 10/24/2009 6:33:53 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, > > > xrisacct@ writes: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I'll be blunt and say that I think that is absurd, xris; responsible > > > parents do > > > > not leave young children alone and unsupervised for hours at a time. > > > > Poverty-level working parents can still make responsible choices for > > > > their kids' > > > > safety and welfare. > > > > > > Where I lived ,there weren't any people willing to watch kids, and the > > > local tanf people would not pay money to people-they had to go out and > > get a > > > job. And no employer ever gave a break at all to any parent if their > kid > > was > > > sick, or in trouble, or alone at home. My cousin lost 4 jobs i none > year > > > due to that. It literally was do or die-people lost their kids due to > > the > > > fact no one would watch them. Add to that that the local grandparents > > had the > > > idea that the kids had to work out problems for themselves, and > refused > > to > > > watch them, and they still can't do anything to make them help. > > > > > > > > > > > When my Sister started elementary school our nada began working > again; > > > when > > > > elementary school let out my Sister was supposed to take the school > > bus > > > home and > > > > stay at our neighbor's house (the neighbor lady had children near my > > > Sister's > > > > age) until our nada got home a couple of hours later. I don't know > > > whether my > > > > nada paid our neighbor to watch my Sister or not, however. > > > > > > But you had someone else willing-the majority of parents nationwide, > > > according to surveys over and over ,do not. > > > > > > You can be as judgmental as you want, but rent is still due at the > first > > > week, and if there is no money, there's no place to live. And no one > to > > > watch the kids. We watched over a dozen one day, simply because we had > a > > > ridiculous amount of food ,were willing ,and the parents were screwed. > > When cops > > > and others tried to make trouble, I stood up for the kids and parents, > > > and > > > they backed right down-they weren't used to someone knowing the actual > > laws > > > willing to fight back with a better vocabulary than they had, and they > > > just stood there staring, looking dumbfounded. The heck with them-if > > it's > > > surivival, I have stood up for anyone. And despite your judgment, that > > > won't > > > make those people I helped out get a sitter no matter what. I knew > what > > to do, > > > but even with that, only one woman was willing to watch my honey's > kids, > > > since the laws changed right after Bush took office, and the 50+ > people > > who > > > were willing, went down to two-and the other just simply said no, > > > despite being required by law, and there was nothing we could do. > > > > > > You sound like my nada-she always said there was a way, but I have > never > > > found one, and neither ever did she, for most of the things she > claimed > > did > > > have answers. That's just pure abuse-there are not good solutions for > > most > > > problems despite the rhetoric, and until there are, settling for > second > > > best is pretty much what most people have to do. Quoting about your > > nada's > > > neighbor won't solve that either-we didn't, and neither did most of > our > > > neighbors, have anyone to watch the kids. > > > > > > If a woman with 2 kids leaves them, and comes home 6 hours later and > > they > > > are fine, then she will do it again. She has no other choice in many > > places > > > in the U.S. > > > > > > At age 11 I was > > > > considered old enough to participate in supervised after-school > > > activities then > > > > walk home and be home alone for a little while until nada returned. > > > > > > Where we lived, there are none, and the age of being able to watch > > onself > > > was 13. That means if a 12 year old answers the door when a jerk > > neighbor > > > calls the cops, then your kids are taken out of the home, and the cops > > don't > > > tell you where they are for up to 48 hours. > > > > > > It didn't happen to us, as we were fortunate. But it happened to > enough > > > people, I stopped being judgmental like you, and realized no amount of > > > criticism would cause money to appear, and sitters to appear, for > free, > > or even > > > to be available. > > > > > > Everyone seems to think working women are " magic " , and can make all > > that > > > happen without help or money, and I know better now. There aren't > > resources > > > for the majority of Americans anymore, or people helping so those > > problems > > > will keep happening. Alternet had an article about one Ohio town where > > men > > > drive to, since there are so many lonely teen girls, and they ask men > on > > > the street for sex, basically anyone-and it's due to economics and a > > lack of > > > things to do. Each and every time the girls were given something to do > > or > > > some sort of realistic hope, instead of one of those Women Resource > > Center > > > people giving them a feminist lecture ,that stopped too. > > > > > > I've been offered sex twice by 11 year old little girls-once at > Coronado > > > mall in ABQ, and once in West Virginia. Little girls NEVER asked me > that > > in > > > places that had jobs, or parents around. But that is all dependent on > > > things beyond any parent's control. We left WV, as we were able to do > > so. I know > > > people there now, even if it meant killing someone in cold blood, they > > > would do it, just for a chance to leave. But money doesn't grow on > > trees, so > > > they get stuck there, and have to go thru the above. > > > > > > > > > > > When my Sister became an adult and had her child, she was a single > mom > > > and had > > > > to rely on housekeepers and daycare and sitters to watch her boy > while > > > she > > > > worked. They didn't have a lot of material possessions, but when > that > > > child was > > > > little he was never left alone to take care of himself; > > > > > > The average work week where we lived was 23 hours, the average pay, > > about > > > 6$ an hour. Both parents worked at the employer's whim, otherwise you > > lost > > > your job-only took two absences, for any reason ,to be fired. > > > > > > So given that rent averaged 500$ a month, how exactly would you work > > that, > > > then? Utilities ran $100-400$ a month, too. And don't give me that > thing > > > about employer's listening to parents or working with them-I tried > that, > > and > > > so did everyone I knew, and no one ever had an amployer listen ever. > If > > > you were called at 2 pm, and told to come to work, you either did it > or > > lost > > > your job. Didn't matter if your kids were 6-8, and came home to an > empty > > > house, you still had to go, and the school refused to deliver messages > > too. > > > And there was always some neighbor who would call the cops on you, > > unless > > > you gave them food, sex, or something else to get them to shut up. My > > honey > > > didn't have to do that, since I was there, and really got people like > > that > > > into some serious problems with their own employers and the cops. But > > not > > > everyone is quick as I am, went to college and took civil rights > courses > > ,or > > > has a 148 IQ, or prior experience with a nada, either. > > > > > > she made sure he had > > > > interesting after-school activities like martial arts classes and > > > Scouting and > > > > such when he was older. > > > > > > Martial arts courses are 100$ a month where I live, 60$ per person > where > > I > > > used to live, So how ,on the above work schedules and money would you > do > > > that? Hmm? You wouldn't. And when the cop showed up as he did with my > > > cousin, Mr Whitey from Barboursville, and offered to get rid of her > > problems with > > > the cops in return for sex, and he told her he had two girls that > > " looked > > > like her " , and it was either that or lose them you'd be thinking twice > > too. > > > People get pushed into situations like that. They don't choose them. > And > > > in some places like where I used to live, that is the only choice > there > > is, > > > at all. > > > > > > > > > > > Its just irresponsible, selfish and narcissistic to leave little > kids > > > alone > > > > > > You are a pretty self righteous person if after reading the above, you > > > still think that, and you ought to be ashamed of yourself. All your > > nada-like > > > judgment is not going to make money appear where it doesn't exist. And > > that > > > is now the operative m.o. for most people, most parents, nationwide. > > > > > > and > > > > unsupervised for hours at a time or to leave an 8 year old " in > charge > > > of " a > > > > younger child or children; in fact its considered abusive to > > " parentify " > > > a young > > > > child that way. > > > > > > Well, when the 9$ an hour cps person shows up, you can explain to her > > why > > > the kids are alone , and how there isn't any money. I'm sure that will > > > make > > > you feel good and self righteous to put someone down like that, as > their > > > kids get taken away. I saw that happen, which is why even now I will > not > > > report people to cps. They didn't do anything but terrorize anyone > > anyway. > > > Only one person listened, and she helped us out, AND was made head of > > the > > > local cps unit right afterwards too. But for the other people, who > don't > > know > > > what to do, your judgment won't help them one bit. > > > > > > Women like that need help, not judgment. As the Bible says, mercy > > triumphs > > > over judgment. I saw what I saw, including blacks getting beat up and > > > threatened by cops for no reason ,and I will die a liberal due to > that. > > I was a > > > white separatist at that time too. But I know better now, and know > > people > > > are just people. They get into situations they can't help. Blacks were > > > doing nothing where I lived, and I watched a white cop throw one kid > > down, draw > > > a gun, and point it in his face. His anger grew (the kid's), and he > > > started going after people for it. Displaced, repressed anger. He did > > NOT deserve > > > that, and no one, not even the TV stations, would do anything about > it. > > > But no one needs some judgmental jerk like yourself putting them down, > > just > > > because you think that since your mother got help from someone ,there > > are > > > other people out there who will on command too. I know better. I will > > NEVER > > > judge a woman raising kids for being stressed out ever again, no > > > matter what. I have seen women get forced by cops into sex, and > > > threatened, and no one, not even those stupid Women's Resource > Center's > > people and > > > such help them out. I helped them out, cuz I realized enough when I > was > > a kid > > > what it was like to be judged beyond belief, and will NEVER put > another > > > person down for that kind of hopeless hell or their inability to get > > what they > > > need, ever again. NEVER. I learned something about that, and that was > my > > > nada was profoundly wrong to judge people in that way. Instead, I will > > > just > > > help them as I have always done. > > > > > > Being a light in the darkness is much more helpful than being the > > darkness > > > holding a bucket of water for the candle. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 25, 2009 Report Share Posted October 25, 2009 In a message dated 10/25/2009 9:43:08 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, kimmie827@... writes: And what the hell does my age have to do with it? Are you now assuming that either young people or old people somehow don't have valid opinions? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.