Emile comments on Less Wrong Parents - Less Wrong

11 Post author: saliency 03 November 2012 04:59AM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (58)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: MixedNuts 03 November 2012 11:29:17PM 9 points [-]

Several Internet people have reported that if someone doesn't tell you "My family is horribly fucked up and I spent most of my childhood in excruciating suffering of some kind, and if I tried to tell my parents about it they called me mean names" it means you don't know them well enough yet. I have no idea how to fix that, but it seems worth keeping in mind, and perhaps increasing the weight of "my kid is sincerely hurt by things I consider trivial" relative to "my kid is a selfish whiny attention whore with no sense of proportion", even if the latter turns out to be true of kids in general.

Comment author: Emile 03 November 2012 11:44:15PM 8 points [-]

Interesting - I can't relate to that that much, but I notice people report different experiences and have different assumptions about parents, I wonder which is more common ... I guess this calls for a poll!

So how much do you think this describes your childhood?

My family is horribly fucked up

Yes No

I spent most of my childhood in excruciating suffering of some kind

Yes No

f I tried to tell my parents about it they called me mean names

Yes No

(I agree with your conclusion, by the way!)

Submitting...

Comment author: pianoforte611 07 January 2014 11:22:04PM *  0 points [-]

Wow, that is a lot of "Yes" responses.

I am in shock at the "yes" responses to the third question. Relevant

Comment author: Eneasz 05 November 2012 06:32:59PM -1 points [-]

The "My family is horribly fucked up" is kinda fuzzy. I consider "fairly fucked up" to be the norm. So if my family is about average, should I vote close to Yes (because they're not horribly fucked up, but sorta) or should I vote No (because they are the norm)?