I do the “adult midget” approach too, you don’t want to hear me try to do a “talking to children” voice, it’s like something out of a horror film.
It does bother me how people are like “you just need to spend time with kids and you’ll like them!”, the confusion and horror on their faces when I tell them I’ve interacted with hundreds of children and still don’t is pretty funny though.
This conversation is highly valid, and certainly the "adult midget" paradigm will give a significant boost of verbal ability to two and three year olds. But you guys, kids are amazing kinesthetic learners. I demonstrated the words "and", "or" and "not" to my granddaughters when they were 18 months. They understood the concepts in less than two minutes. I've taught preschoolers the concept of mathematical infinite limits by using a toy frog on the floor. And, what about the "distributive property" in algebra? Get a roll of pennies, lay them on the floor, move them to match your verbal descriptions, and you'll have math wizards before 4 candles are on their birthday cake.
Once, I made flash cards with 14 basic words, and my kids snatched them out of my hands. They started building sentences of the floor.
Do either of you have trouble doing major auto repair without the help of a shop manual? That's because you never saw how it was done at age two and a half. I mean, fuck, lighten up. The brilliance of humanity is in the unprogrammed brains of the youngest among us. Your challenge is to learn the "essence" of youthfulness from them. It's powerful as hell.
I have a psychology degree, I’m well aware that the development of children’s brains is fascinating. But for me that doesn’t translate to an interest in interacting with actual children.
My interactions with them have ranged from neutral to hideously awkward, sometimes dissolving into tears from the child for no apparent reason and the fact that I don’t find them cute makes behaviours that others find endearing tedious to me. As I said, some of us are just not “kiddie people”.
I do like the idea that I can blame my lack of mechanical ability on the fact that I was improperly educated aged 2 and a half though. I’m bringing that one out at the next family argument.
Yeah, well, okay. I know my own views here are biased by my mistrust of my own comfort zone. I like to get pleasantly uncomfortable by thinking outside the box. Since pre-schoolers don't even have a box, I'll just get down on the floor and translate advance concepts into their stream-of-consciousness world of toys and games. It starts as "parallel play", but soon they're eating out of my hand.
BTW, interesting material for the family argument. It should result in blame avoidance that will bring back old memories.
People can compute that as well as they can asexuality.
What bothers me most is the fact that people treat liking children as a universal concept. 'Do you like kids?'...as if it's an all or nothing equation.
I most certainly do not like ALL kids. Some kids are cool; some go down the well.
I thought I was gonna have 2 throw female pastachild down the well 4 a while cuz she wasnt takin 2 the gun safety lessons as a toddler the way pastachild did, but then I remembered she will be 12 someday
No particular reason thats a important age rly. I just have a feelin she will be less annoyin by then is all
She sure looks a lot like her mom did before she got all bitchy though
IIN to hate children?
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I do the “adult midget” approach too, you don’t want to hear me try to do a “talking to children” voice, it’s like something out of a horror film.
It does bother me how people are like “you just need to spend time with kids and you’ll like them!”, the confusion and horror on their faces when I tell them I’ve interacted with hundreds of children and still don’t is pretty funny though.
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dude_Jones
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CountessDouche
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This conversation is highly valid, and certainly the "adult midget" paradigm will give a significant boost of verbal ability to two and three year olds. But you guys, kids are amazing kinesthetic learners. I demonstrated the words "and", "or" and "not" to my granddaughters when they were 18 months. They understood the concepts in less than two minutes. I've taught preschoolers the concept of mathematical infinite limits by using a toy frog on the floor. And, what about the "distributive property" in algebra? Get a roll of pennies, lay them on the floor, move them to match your verbal descriptions, and you'll have math wizards before 4 candles are on their birthday cake.
Once, I made flash cards with 14 basic words, and my kids snatched them out of my hands. They started building sentences of the floor.
Do either of you have trouble doing major auto repair without the help of a shop manual? That's because you never saw how it was done at age two and a half. I mean, fuck, lighten up. The brilliance of humanity is in the unprogrammed brains of the youngest among us. Your challenge is to learn the "essence" of youthfulness from them. It's powerful as hell.
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SkullsNRoses
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I have a psychology degree, I’m well aware that the development of children’s brains is fascinating. But for me that doesn’t translate to an interest in interacting with actual children.
My interactions with them have ranged from neutral to hideously awkward, sometimes dissolving into tears from the child for no apparent reason and the fact that I don’t find them cute makes behaviours that others find endearing tedious to me. As I said, some of us are just not “kiddie people”.
I do like the idea that I can blame my lack of mechanical ability on the fact that I was improperly educated aged 2 and a half though. I’m bringing that one out at the next family argument.
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dude_Jones
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Yeah, well, okay. I know my own views here are biased by my mistrust of my own comfort zone. I like to get pleasantly uncomfortable by thinking outside the box. Since pre-schoolers don't even have a box, I'll just get down on the floor and translate advance concepts into their stream-of-consciousness world of toys and games. It starts as "parallel play", but soon they're eating out of my hand.
BTW, interesting material for the family argument. It should result in blame avoidance that will bring back old memories.
People can compute that as well as they can asexuality.
What bothers me most is the fact that people treat liking children as a universal concept. 'Do you like kids?'...as if it's an all or nothing equation.
I most certainly do not like ALL kids. Some kids are cool; some go down the well.
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pastafather
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SkullsNRoses
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I thought I was gonna have 2 throw female pastachild down the well 4 a while cuz she wasnt takin 2 the gun safety lessons as a toddler the way pastachild did, but then I remembered she will be 12 someday
No particular reason thats a important age rly. I just have a feelin she will be less annoyin by then is all
She sure looks a lot like her mom did before she got all bitchy though
“What is it, Lassie? Timmy’s fallen in the well? That sounds like Timmy’s problem to me, Lassie.”
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CountessDouche
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Lassie was one dog treat away from forgetting the whole thing. I saw a documentary about this once. It was called "The Ring" or something.