Terminalcoffee discussion
Rants / Debates (Serious)
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The At Home Parent vs. The World Do-Gooder Parent
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Agreed.
That's like the argument posed a while back about who would make a better leader: an alcoholic, womanizing, sexist, bigoted, overweight man, or a tee-totaling, vegetarian-eating, sex-refraining, relatively healthy man?
If you said the latter, then you agreed Hitler was the better leader. The former was Winston Churchill.
That's like the argument posed a while back about who would make a better leader: an alcoholic, womanizing, sexist, bigoted, overweight man, or a tee-totaling, vegetarian-eating, sex-refraining, relatively healthy man?
If you said the latter, then you agreed Hitler was the better leader. The former was Winston Churchill.
I think this is a really important issue.
I do think that once children are old enough to be aware of what their parents are doing (say, age 6-7 on), parents should set some example of doing good in the world, and not just in the home, by volunteering or doing whatever, and talking about it with the kids or even taking the kids along to get a taste of it. I see some parents who are so focused on micromanaging their family life that the kids never get a look at the big picture. The world and what's going on in it.
I do think that once children are old enough to be aware of what their parents are doing (say, age 6-7 on), parents should set some example of doing good in the world, and not just in the home, by volunteering or doing whatever, and talking about it with the kids or even taking the kids along to get a taste of it. I see some parents who are so focused on micromanaging their family life that the kids never get a look at the big picture. The world and what's going on in it.



Ted Williams single mother worked relentlessly for the Salvation Army. Ted and his brother were home alone most of the time as children.
So does anyone think that the do-gooder is the better person?