T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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741.1 | Humor? | ALFA2::PEASLEE | | Tue May 10 1994 12:24 | 7 |
| Re: .606
Are you really proud that you tried to kick a small bird? And are you
really trying to teach your child that hurting a small animal is funny?
Maybe I'm missing something but I fail to see the humor in hurting
small animals and then reinforcing in a child that its OK to hurt a
small animal.
|
741.2 | Yes, I thought it was funny | STAR::AWHITNEY | | Tue May 10 1994 12:28 | 2 |
| I believe she said 'kicked at it' which was probably to scare it out of
her way, not really kick it and hurt it.
|
741.3 | Glad I'm not the only one who caught that | JUPITR::KAGNO | | Tue May 10 1994 13:57 | 10 |
| Thanks .608. I'm read-only, but failed to see the
humor in that as well. What type of message does that convey to a
small child? That it's okay to kick at a living creature if it's in
your way?
Kick it or kicked at it... it's the same thing. He could have just
walked around it being a lot bigger than the bird.
-Roberta
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741.4 | | STAR::AWHITNEY | | Tue May 10 1994 15:32 | 12 |
| I don't know - seems to me that it's not a very big deal. Of course
that is only my opinion, but if this is something ya'll are going to
get upset about, I hate to see what would happen if something really
bad happened ;*)
I sometimes feel that maybe I'm a little too 'loose' with my daughter.
I don't sweat the small stuff, I know the background is there and that
sometimes it really is FUNNY to burp at the dinner table or say Nah Nah
nah nah nah... FWIW - I thought it was a funny story....but then
again, like I said, I'm not uptight and don't sweat the small stuff.
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741.5 | Usually read-only, but this issue is hot for me | NIMBUS::HARRISON | Icecreamoholic | Tue May 10 1994 16:13 | 7 |
| I, too, am pretty laid back, but I don't consider this to be "small
stuff" at all. I consider kicking another living being to be cruel.
"Kicking at" another being is a means of intimidation. In either
event, these are not messages that I would want to convey to my
child.
Leslie
|
741.6 | not small stuff... | SOLVIT::RUSSO | | Tue May 10 1994 17:02 | 16 |
| I wouldn't put kicking a bird and burping at the dinner table in the
same category. I think that respect for *all* life is a very important
lesson to be learned as early on as possible. When my son was 2,
we saw a toad in the yard while we were playing baseball. I pointed it
out to him and he walked over and hit it (not very hard) with the bat.
My husband and I were very shocked by this behavior because we had
always taught him to be very gentle with our cat. We were very upset
with him for this and talked to him very seriously about this. I don't
think he was aware at that age that everything is capable of getting
'boo boos'. We watched over the frog for a while until we were sure
it was ok and then put it somewhere safer. I think this was one of his
most important lessons. He still talks about it. Just my opinion.
Mary Russo
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741.7 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue May 10 1994 17:03 | 1 |
| What about mosquitoes?
|
741.8 | I knew that was next | SOLVIT::RUSSO | | Tue May 10 1994 17:10 | 6 |
| re: .-1
I knew when I hot ctrl Z that the bug question was coming.
I guess that would be self defense:o)
Mary
|
741.9 | Yes, even respect to bugs! | NIMBUS::HARRISON | Icecreamoholic | Tue May 10 1994 17:46 | 10 |
| Well, as far as the bug issue goes, we try to minimize killing bugs,
too. I know that it's a judgement call, and perhaps hypocritical,
but we emphasize that we only kill bugs when they can hurt us (e.g.,
mosquitos, bees, etc.) and only then when it's absolutely necessary.
Our son (2.5 years old) was excited to tell us the other day that he
picked up a spider from inside our house and put it outside where it
belongs.
Leslie
|
741.10 | :-) | DECALP::GUTZWILLER | dad pays;it pays to be dad | Tue May 10 1994 18:29 | 13 |
|
uuhhh, i just read 14.606 and could almost hear tobias giggling. :-)
his mum probably never kicks anything, that's why that must've seemed so funny
to him...
was there something on burping contests earlier on in this string? yeah, i am
in to this with my youngsters (but only if their mum is out of the house of
course!!!)
regards,
andreas.
|
741.11 | A few thoughts | BARSTR::PCLX31::satow | gavel::satow, dtn 223-2584 | Wed May 11 1994 09:24 | 36 |
| First, I've seen many, many, notes by the author of 14.606. Every one of
them reflects a deep respect for living things, especially children.
Second, I personally see a big difference between "kicking at" a bird to
"shoo" it from a place it isn't wanted, and "kicking" an animal. Unless the
bird is very nearly dead, it is impossible for a human to even come close
striking it. Actually, the ineffectuality is what make it looks quite
humorous to some; my guess is that's exactly what happened in 14.606 -- dad
(I think it's dad) looked silly. There have been many times that I've
charged, shouted at, or "threatened" pigeons. Intimidating, for sure, but
they are themselves intimidating; they literally mob our bird feeder,
frightening away smaller birds. I feel no remorse about scaring away the
pigeons.
Third, the issue around mosquitoes brings up an interesting point to me. Not
so much the mosquito thing, but for the vast majority of us we do things that
may seem hypocritical to children. I'm not talking just about slapping
mosquitoes; I'm talking about when your child begins to understand that
dinner was once a living breathing thing; that those chicken nuggets were
something like the chickens in the story books. I remember for us that it
was very hard for my sister when she made the connection between the rabbits
that we fed daily and woke up early in the morning to unfreeze their water
dishes, and the "chicken" that we ate for dinner. Has this been difficult
for any of you? How did you handle it?
Fourth, nature is itself cruel. Was that a hard lesson for your kids to
learn, or for you to explain? We had a fascinating example last summer. We
looked out in our yard and saw a very large red tailed hawk literally tearing
apart and eating a squirrel it had caught. It wasn't the least bit concerned
with us -- my son got within 15 feet of it. When it left, we buried the
squirrel.
Clay
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741.12 | A lesson to be learned | BIGQ::MARCHAND | | Wed May 11 1994 09:31 | 36 |
| I think 14.606 may be a lesson of learning. It reminds me of all
the times parents laugh at things their kids do, because it's their
kids. But, if another child did the same thing it's not funny.
This example wasn't funny, but my daughter and I had a hard time
not to laugh while she was telling my grandson that what he did was
discusting and not appropiate. He asked for an extra napkin because he
needed to blow his nose (he's 4 years old and we were in a restaurant).
While blowing his nose he decided to dig something out and loudly
annouced something. This is what he said (very loud), "Meme and mommy,
look at the big b--gy I took out of my nose." I looked and almost
died. My daughter tried so hard to tell him that it wasn't a
very nice thing and that it grouses people out. He said. "Look at it,
it's really big and neat." It was like he didn't care what she was
saying. It was very interesting to him. I laughed later when he wasn't
around. Not at what he did, but because it was him and he was so
cute and really determined for people to look. He was amazed for some
reason.
I have a feeling that is what happened in the case of 14.606.
Sometimes we forget and have to get the situation in question together
with appropiate behavior and what they are doing. If another child
did what my grandson did, I wouldn't have thought it was funny at
all. I didn't let him know that it was funny, but to me it was, because
he's my grandson and I think that makes a difference.
Just like the child seeing his parent do something that would
have been terrible for someone else to do, but because the parent
did it there was something funny about it.
I hope this makes sense in what I'm trying to say. Lessons can
be learned from experiences like this.
Rose
I think what happened in this case is pretty si
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741.13 | | BIGQ::MARCHAND | | Wed May 11 1994 09:35 | 7 |
| .12
The last sentence under my name the si (was going to be similiar)
I messed up somehow and I'm not sure how to re-edit a reply I already
wrote.
Rose
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741.14 | Wow | TLE::FRIDAY | DEC Fortran: a gem of a language | Wed May 11 1994 10:39 | 7 |
| When I posted the note about the pigeon I knew that some people
might take issue with it, but I posted it anyway. After things
have settled down a bit I'll post a reply to this string; that,
of course, will probably start a whole new discussion :-)
For those of you who weren't sure whether it's Dad or Mom, it's
Dad (not that it should matter).
|