RE: Sowing good family values for a bountiful harvest

You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

Sowing good family values for a bountiful harvest

in life •  7 years ago 

Kids just don't get this kind of upbringing anymore, is it just me who thinks that? I enjoyed my childhood we didn't have much but what we did have was respect. I see a lot of kids these days with no stability, no values and then we wonder why they turn out to have issues in later life. I have a friend who's child stays in his room 16 hours a day playing PlayStation and wont eat vegetables! How has this happened? What ever happened to good old family values? Perhaps i'm being a little cynical and there is still this kind of up bringing out there and im just not seeing it. Great Post Galen

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

You're right mate, but I'm at a loss also. I don't how it go to this. It's a combination of many things I suppose. Consumerism, MTV, materialism, higher wages and the Kardashians? I don't know. What I do know is there's a lot of ill-mannered people out there, kids and adults. I think that's the sad result of the loss of family values. Just my opinion. Maybe also people don't think they have the time for manners. I mean, who has the time to say thank you, or please. And to smile at the checkout operator at the supermarket? Wow, that smile would take a whole millisecond out of a person's life.

People are so caught up in their own lives. Too interested in what the Kardashian's are doing to engage with their own life. Kids see it and copy it from a young age. Parents giving their kids phones to keep the quiet etc. Pathetic.

Your friend's kid on the playstation? I've heard the same before. I don't have the answers though. I'm not a parent unfortunately. All I can say is that my kids would know how to light a fire, snare a rabbit, shoot a gun, kayak, navigate off map and compass and a myriad of other things. They'd also respect their elders and have manners. It's how I was brought up. (Well, I wasn't taught all the outdoorsy stuff, I learned that later, but the appetite for it certainly started as a child.)

Thanks for your comment man.