meandtheguys2
<font color=red>Did not need to resort to hissy fi
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2004
- Messages
- 6,210
Gee.. judgemental much?

Gee.. judgemental much?
Edited: Okay, BIG typo there. Let me try again.
We all have to be confident in OUR OWN parenting choices.
There.
btw, not all day cares are an "institution." Ds10 went to a home day care from 4 mos. until he began kindergarten. She had a small group of 5 kids she cared for, her own were moved out and 1 in HS, then college. She had been doing day care since her oldest began kind. since it's only half day and there were no after school programs in those days. He bonded very well with her, no high turnover like a kinder-care and he loved her like having a 3rd grandmom. He could lay on the couch, etc. All the nice things of feeling like home.A school building is an institution. All of my kids go to a school that is an institution. I used the term genericly to refer to a building that is not a home. A hospital is also an institution as is a library and about 100 other things. Why do people get offended just because I am using the English laguage in the correct way. It is not my problem if some don't know the definition of "insitution" and jump to being defensive. I honestly did not say that as a jab. I was saying I prefer my kids to be at home the majority and not at school or a daycare or another public facilty, but since I have a command over the English language, I shortened by saying" institution".
And my offense at the original post came from Jodifla's jab at how she would have "MUCH rather be at school playing with friends than at home watching her mother fold laundry" which was a direct insult aimed at my previous post about how my daughter loves to sit and help me and chat with me while I do that, and that home time is not "wasted" time for us as other were referring to it.
Why is it OK to sling an unrelated jab at a SAHM in defense to a word I used in the proper context that some may not like because they don't know the true definition? Sorry, but public daycares are very much institutions.
Yes it's wrong. Did you have children so someone else could raise them? As a teacher don't you understand the importance of raising your children? Your home by 4pm, my DH dosent get home until 7pm and he would NEVER want them in daycare when he was home all day. Thankfully we have never had to put them in such a place.
When you have children they always come first. No question.
Yes it's wrong. Did you have children so someone else could raise them? As a teacher don't you understand the importance of raising your children? Your home by 4pm, my DH dosent get home until 7pm and he would NEVER want them in daycare when he was home all day. Thankfully we have never had to put them in such a place.
When you have children they always come first. No question.
First, around here there is a difference between daycare and preschool. There are even different types of preschoolsocial based or educational based. Each preschool is a learning environment; it is just a matter of how they teach and what they concentrate on. We went the social route, but they still learn. Daycare is just babysitting. It is safe. It is fun. There is nothing wrong with it, but it is different. Preschools also accommodate the working parent. .
Do not diminish the pain of a child who sleeps chained in a closet, ribs cracked from her latest beating by equating her to a child who has learned to sleep by crying it out for a few nights in her crib. Do not diminish the pain of a child who has been sexually abused by equating her to a child that sleeps peacefully between her loving parents or still breastfeeds at 2 and 3 years old. Do not diminish the pain of a child who has not eaten for days by equating her to a child who is not fed meat or who drinks formula.
Don't get me wrong, I completely agree with the overall point of this post. However, I couldn't read this part of your argument and not respond. While formula correlates to hunger and some believe CIO correlates to cruelty/abuse, breastfeeding NEVER correlates to sexual abuse. Breastfeeding a 2- or 3-year-old child may not be the norm in this country, but it is in many parts of the world and is the BIOLOGICAL norm for our species. Breastfeeding is food and it is comfort, but it is NOT sex.
And formula NEVER correlates to hunger nor does CIO correlate to abuse. CIO is also widely used and is our NORM in raising kids historically in the Western world - you think my great grandmother had time to attachment parent fourteen children on a 800 acre farm? And formula is anti-hunger for those of us that can't breastfeed.
When CIO is taken to ridiculous levels, it might be abuse. And when breastfeeding is taken to ridiculous levels, its abuse and sex. The only time formula equates to hunger is when its withheld (or when Nestle makes formula that doesn't have any nutrional value to sell into the third world - which they stopped doing years ago) - and some people withhold the breast as well.
(I knew a guy whose mother breastfed him until he was a teenager - the relationship became sexual when he was eight or nine - it was a REALLY screwed up and abusive thing - not normal at all - but for her, the breastfeeding WAS sex. His father had left when he was an infant and the whole thing was ooky - I knew him in his twenties, when he was just beginning to grasp that his relationship with his mother wasn't normal).
Please let's not turn this thread into this. These are all exteme examples and have nothing to do with getting a babysitter while you clean your house. If you need a break to make you a better parent go for it. Who cares what everyone thinks? Do what you think is best.
While formula correlates to hunger...
Please let's not turn this thread into this. These are all exteme examples and have nothing to do with getting a babysitter while you clean your house. If you need a break to make you a better parent go for it. Who cares what everyone thinks? Do what you think is best.
Hey, don't come down on me...I wasn't the one who correlated formula to hunger and CIO to abuse......
I am saying do what you think is best - part of my point was to say "no, these things AREN'T hunger or abuse - unless taken to ridiculous extremes, which can happen with breastfeeding (or really anything).
Could you verify this statement ChristmasEveTwins? I'm trying to understand it. I only breastfed my DS for he first 6 weeks. Due to several reasons, I formula fed my DD from birth...How is formula equating to hunger?
Or am I just reading that wrong?
Thanks!
Hey, don't come down on me...I wasn't the one who correlated formula to hunger and CIO to abuse......
I am saying do what you think is best - part of my point was to say "no, these things AREN'T hunger or abuse - unless taken to ridiculous extremes, which can happen with breastfeeding (or really anything).
You must have read it wrong. The pp correlated (NOT equated!) CIO to abuse and formula to starving and bfing to sex. My point is that while a correlation could be drawn between the other two examples, ie, formula is food and letting a baby CIO is perceived as neglect or abuse by some people, breastfeeding should never be compared with sex.
In the extreme case of the elusive 9-year-old that was breastfed, it doesn't even compare or pertain to the discussion. The pp correlated bfing a 2 or 3-year-old to sexual abuse, which it clearly is not. And btw, "everyone" seems to know some poor kid who was bf'd until he was 9 years old . . .
I'm sorry, but I truly don't understand.How can you disagree with that? That is the way it is HERE. In my area, where I live. I was pretty clear on that. Or at least I thought I was. I was in no way implying that is the way it is everywhere. But in my area, which is in a completely different state than you, that is truly the case. What you have is billed not as in-home daycare, but in-home preschool.
ETA--Here there is actually different licensing requirements for daycares and preschools. There is a difference--HERE.
In the extreme case of the elusive 9-year-old that was breastfed, it doesn't even compare or pertain to the discussion. The pp correlated bfing a 2 or 3-year-old to sexual abuse, which it clearly is not. And btw, "everyone" seems to know some poor kid who was bf'd until he was 9 years old . . .