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Date: | Thu, 20 Mar 1997 14:20:31 -0800 |
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Liz and others: My thoughts, for what they're worth these days, are that
our society has this intense need to "hurry growing up." We hurry babies
to walk, talk, wean, potty-train, etc. The ironic part about this is that
we hurry babies to become children, and children to become adolescents, and
adolescents to become adults; just so the adults can then revert to
infantile behavior. How many of us know adults who do whatever they can to
revert to adolescence during mid-life (or escape from reality via drugs)?
I know my father went through what I call "divorced father syndrome" and
did the whole sports car, gold chains, and at that time disco shirts made
of Kiana. Maybe if we just let kids be kids for a reasonable amount of
time we wouldn't have this need as adults. For those who are interested in
this topic, David Elkind's book The Hurried Child is excellent.
From Oregon where spring is in the air!
: )Chris Hafner-Eaton, PhD, MPH, CHES, IBCLC email: [log in to unmask] : )
: )HSR & Health Educational Consultant voice/fax: 541 753 7340 : )
: )LLLLLLLLLLLLL**CHANGE THE WORLD, NURTURE A CHILD!**LLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL : )
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