
Originally Posted by
Consensus
Argh I had a whole response written out about this that got erased. Now don't have the time to fully respond.
First, though, and I know you 100% don't intend for offense (and no offense taken), but as a working mom my life is very busy, and that's just what God has handed us right now. I don't have a choice to be working (I don't work full-time because I don't have to, but I still work a good deal) and I'm pregnant and DH recently had back surgery so I'm 100% household chores, cooking, child management, outside chores, vehicle maintenance. Often my off days are spent doing errands to fulfill the needs for our family and that means dragging DD along for that time. It's not what I envisioned as quality time, but it really puts a smile on my face when we just have a joyful time out even in the midst of the busy-ness. Polly hit the nail on the head in that I'm extremely focused on being a Christ-centered home, and regardless of our circumstances, busy or not, it's important we have perspective on what the big picture is, which is seeking God and Christ in everything. I work pretty hard at being disciplined and organized so that our free family time is truly free.
As far as parenting by feelings, I'm not sure I know what you mean? But my DD is still young. I have seen inconsistent discipline - sometimes given, sometimes not regardless of whether or not it was threatened, not giving clear reason for not allowing something which was allowed some other time. Is that what you mean? Do you see a difference within your church vs not?
I think we are hearing about suicides more now; news used to be a lot more localized. It's hard to say if suicide rates are going up. I do think social media contributes to more insiduous bullying partly because it's not done to someone's face and is too easy (but shoot, we see how fast threads can go downhill here so we all know about that phenomenon); I think bullying in general is societally less tolerated now than it used to be.
I was actually thinking the other day that americans 50+ years ago probably got more sleep than we do now, because they didn't have brainwave interrupters keeping them up artificially (laptops, late night TV, video games, smart phones, ect.) I wondered if the trend was tracked and if there were statistical linkages to other things due to lessening sleep. I wonder if emotional fragility could be part of that?