• cRazi_man@europe.pub
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      1 month ago

      The most important office skill was taught by George Costanza: look angry and people will think you’re busy working hard.

  • WhiteOakBayou@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago
    • How to be attentive to one’s surrounds
    • How To project effort
    • conflict resolution
    • Extemporaneous creative modeling
  • Armand1@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    This one hits a little too close to home…

    Also, the word you’re looking for might be “abusive” rather than “strict”.

    • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      Extreme strictness is a form of abuse. These symptoms are particular, though not individually exclusive, to strictness. As long as you “behave” you avoid the material effects of the abuse. Other forms of abuse typically have fewer “rules” that can be used as safeguards.

          • Inaminate_Carbon_Rod@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            It basically comes down to:

            My parents: do it or I’ll kick your ass

            My wife and I: please do it, here are the reasons for us asking and if you do it you get positive attention and possibly a physical reward.

            If you don’t do it, we talk about why and we listen to the reasons they give and adjust our parenting style if necessary based on their feedback.

            They then go and do it.

  • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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    1 month ago

    As the other person said, it really depends on what people mean by “strict”.

    My parents were “strict” in that they enforced a bed time. Now I have better than average sleeping habits. So that worked out.

    But I’ve also read about “strict” parents that, like, take doors off their kids rooms, or read the kids private messages, or other nightmares

    • compostgoblin@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      1 month ago

      Yeah, my parents made us leave our cell phones on the kitchen counter so they could read our texts every night, and they installed software on our computers that took screenshots every 5 seconds.

      I wonder why I have issues with authority figures and privacy?

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        Strict is only “bad” when the structure is bad.

        Being strict about not playing with fire is a good thing. Being strict about never going near a campfire is, at best neutral, and could be bad when taken to an extreme. Being strict about never going camping is bad.

        Strict only means keeping rules in place. It doesn’t mean you can’t be flexible, that you can’t adjust rules as the kid ages and matures. It definitely doesn’t mean the rules have to be arbitrary and can’t be explained and discussed.

        You think being strict about a kid not using racial slurs is a bad thing?

        Or making them see a doctor regularly and as needed?

        Or that they bathe?

        The list of things that can’t be negotiable is very long if you go into detail.

        The list of things that can’t be negotiable at a given level of age and maturity isn’t short either.

        Strict doesn’t have to be done badly at all. It’s just that uncompromising strictness is the opposite end of a slider from utter laissez faire. Which has just as many flaws.

        There’s a reason that authoritative is the usual recommended goal; it’s being strict when necessary, and loose when not. But “strict” is part of that. Strict is making sure that there’s a reliable structure a kid can build a foundation of self on. It’s the walls of the sandbox and the sheet of material under out that keeps weeds from poking through.

        The sandbox of development is the freedom to play within those boundaries. It doesn’t have to mean all noes, or all have tos.

        Strict is, “you’ll do your homework because it’s part of the process of learning. When do you want to do it, and what can I do to help?”

        Abusive is “you’ll do your homework or I’ll beat your ass”, and then beating their ass as the first and only option.

    • elephantium@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      This post is starting to make me think people say “strict” strictly as a euphemism.

      What I think it means: The parents never bend the rules for their kids.

      What it apparently means: The parents have anger problems.

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        The problem is it’s often difficult to admit you had abusive parents, and abusive parents love to describe themselves as just strict. So yeah it’s kinda a euphemism

          • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Yeah. And a lot of parental abuse happens in gray areas and with good intentions. Sure you have obvious cases, and they’re common enough I’d suspect most people know someone or another who was a victim to one. But there’s a hell of a lot of parents projecting their fears, traumas, or other issues relating to their kids onto them hard enough to fuck them up.

    • LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I once cut a small artery above my left elbow right before I left work (We were young and just fucking around) Cant remember my exact age, probably late 16 early 17. I took my undershirt off and tied it around my arm to try to slow the bleeding while I drove home. The blood goes threw the shirt, and is all over the inside car door, seatbelt and created a puddle on my pants in the creases because they were those Dickies work pants that are water resistant. When I got out of the car I heard the blood splat on the ground so I figured it was to much. Went inside tied yarn tightly above it and wrapped an old shirt again around it to replace that one as I didn’t have any superglue. I spent the hours of 330am-630am crawling in circles around the house with 2 bottles of resolve, paper towels and wet rags in a bucket trying to clean blood drops off the carpets and floors from when I walked in. The entire time dropping more blood in a near endless cleanup chain with only one thought on my mind. My mother is going to fucking kill me for getting blood on her carpets. At 630 (they open at 7), dizzy as all get out from lack of sleep and blood loss I got back in my car to drive to the clinic just hoping no one pulled me over or I passed out driving. I got there with a blood soaked rag wrapped around my arm and the lady handed me a 2 page clipboard to fill out and I remember staring at her with an expression that clearly said, can’t I fill this out while he stitches my arm? Of course not, so 5 minutes later I hand her a clip board mostly free of blood and paperwork that says I have no insurance.

      The clinic doctor was great. Told him I had no insurance and couldn’t afford anesthetic and asked if he could just do it without. He cleaned it a bit, poked me with a needle of some kind and put in 7 or so stitches. Then marked it down as a consult or something, so I wasn’t charged with any of the items he needed/used. (Like $40 for the visit)

      I’ll always remember that guy. Moral/point of the story though… If you are less afraid of bleeding to death than you are to ask your parents for help, your parents might be abusive as opposed to strict.

      • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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        1 month ago

        That’s a perfect example of where it isn’t strict, it’s abuse. Or at least right on the border.

        Also, damn. I’m sorry you went through that. I’m just glad you found a doc that handled things right.

        • trxxruraxvr@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          That is nowhere near the border. If your kid rather bleeds out than facing you because they got some blood on the carpet you’re far in abusive territory