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Messages By: marianparoo

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angry
March 29, 2008, 6:20 am PDT

On one hand, I am sooo tired of this kind of story, but...

...on the other hand, since women are still falling for these men, it can't be discussed too much.

 

If only one woman is saved by this program, it's worth it.

 
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March 29, 2008, 11:59 pm PDT

Yes, there are battered men, too

But they are usually in a better financial position to get up and leave than women.
 
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confused
March 30, 2008, 12:01 am PDT

People who don't know what the "Superbug" is?

Why not? It's been in the news for years, world over.
 
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March 30, 2008, 12:08 am PDT

Women with alcoholic husbands

I remember when I was in HS back in Yonkers, there was an article that I read in a girl's teen publication about teen drinking.

 

It gave a statistic, as a given, that 90% of husbands will leave an alcoholic wife, but only 10% of women will leave an alcoholic husband.

 

This was given as a reason for girls not to drink to excess.

 

Nowhere was the intrinsic fairness of the situation even questioned!

 
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March 30, 2008, 12:13 am PDT

A friend of mine's 14-15 year old daughter....

...would threaten her divorcee mother that if she didn't get her own TV, cell phone and goodness knows what else, she would take to the streets to earn money for those things.

 

Worked like a charm with the wimp.

 
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March 31, 2008, 12:21 pm PDT

I don't understand your comment

Quote From: sprp2008

Your message makes no sense, obviously you have no comprehension or first-hand knowledge of this topic. 

Do you really think the average woman is equal to a man in strength?  Besides a marriage is supposed to be a union of happiness, not 10 rounds in the boxing ring. 

And yes men usually have more money, but that's what Courts are for.  I didn't take an alimony in my divorce because I would have PAID HIM to get out of my life!  The Court ordered child support, but guess what, he never paid and I didn't want to keep engaging the jerk, so I let it go.

 

My short answer was a reply to a specific comment about battered men.

 

I have a lot of experience in meeting with battered wome, thank you very much, and I know 1) the courts aren't worth a lot 2) the situation we have in this country with religious divorces only mean that men can easily blackmail women into giving up all financial claims and 3) maybe marriage isn't supposed ot be 10 rounds in a boxing ring but sometimes it is. I didn't bring up the subject of physical strength because my comment was in reply to a comment about battered men.

 
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March 31, 2008, 12:30 pm PDT

Whoa!!!!!! This isn't my daughter, this is a friend's daughter!!!!

Quote From: jennyhalfpint2

Wow!  I was taught that money does not grow on trees.  I was taught that I had to earn things.  Just because I wanted a piece of candy in the grocery store, and mom said, "no".  NO meant NO.  Mom did not care if I threw the biggest tantrum.  All mom had to do was to say NO and give me the look. 

 

I was wondering if this started when your daughter was younger, wanting things that she could not have.  And you gave in because buying material things would make her happy, made you happy and just to have a quiet child?  Even if your life was a mess? 

 

I remember as young as seven years old.  I had my first allowance.  My mother took the time to help me make a chart.  Explaining to me tha value of money.  Do you do this?  I was seven!!  I had to save a dollar, I had a dollar to put in the offerring at church, I had a dollar each day for lunch money ($5.00) , I dollar for Girl Scouts, and I had a dollar to spend on what ever I wanted.  Now that  was about $9.00.  If I wanted a toy or candy.  I'd ask, "Mom can I have this?"  Mom would respond, "Do you have enough for your allowance?"  I f I did not have enough money from my allowance, I was encouraged to save.  Or neogiate with my mother/father.  "I will borrow $1.00 from you and I will pay you back, Or I need to save $2.00, so I can purchase this next time.  I would plead and beg, like ALL children do.  The main thing, mom held her foot down and NO meant NO!

 

I would leave with my parents whimpering, sulking, etc.  Until my mother told me to stop it. 

 

As I grew older, my alllowance increased.  My the age of 12,  I was doing small chores around the house to earn money.  Such as extra load of laundry, baby sitting, paper route, recycling, etc.  I also learned that we work for money.  (Example, people earn a living by becoming a doctor and receive a check.) 

 

We learned that we have work to do to help the community.  The community consisted of the household.  Chores had to be done such as keeping our rooms clean, laundry, cooking dinner, grocery shopping, taking care of our pets, helping in the community such as working in a soup kitchen, a nurserying home.  This is work that is done and we do not get a pay check, we do this out of personal satisifaction.

 

As I grew older age of sixteen, mom said, "No more allowance, You can find a part time job after school."  Since then I have been working and realized if I wanted clothes, CD's, videos, go to the movies, etc.  This came out of my pay check.  When I was home for college.  I paid rent, paid for part of the groceries and some of the bills. 

 

I did not own my first car, until I was married at the age of 22, had to pay for my car insurance, rent, bills, etc.  Just being married, we've saved our money.  Ten years later, we bought our first home. 

 

I've kept an accounting record.  Today, I keep track on how much money I spend, what I've spent it on and how much I save.  I vaulable lesson that my mother and father took the time to teach me.  I wish that more parents  do this.  Children grow up expecting this and that.  Just because their peers have the latest pair of jeans, does not mean I had them.  Unless I was willing to buy them with my allowance money. 

 

I do not think it is too late for you to set the rules to your daughter about money.   YES she would be unhappy, get angry, hate you, etc.  But come on, who is the parent?  Is she working part time, helping you make ends meet?  I'm sure you are a one income family.  Are there other children in the house?  Is it fair to them?  Do they expect the same? 

 

Children who grow up learning the value of money are more appreciative of the material things that they have and they take better care of it. 

I'm single without kids. I was strictly raised with limitations! And no was no, and I never would have backtalked my mom like that.

 

I think my friends daughter is like this for two reasons. 1) She saw how everyone pushed her mother around -- not just her father, the ex, but her mother's own family who really exploited her something awful.

 

Also 2) Mom felt being a good parent meant saying yes all the time.

 

To repeat THIS ISN'T ME AND NOT MY CHILD!!!!!!!!!!

 
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April 5, 2008, 10:09 pm PDT

For those parents who believe in spanking and other physical punishment?

At what age do you feel the child is able to make the connection between cause and effect?

 

I've seen parents strike their children who are still in the nonverbal stage.

 
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April 6, 2008, 11:46 pm PDT

I'll ask again, because I didn't get any replies

For parents that are in favor of physical punishment, what age to do you think is the right age to start?

 

When do you think that a child is old enough to make the connection between cause and effect?

 

I have seen parents strike children that are not yet verbal, so I wonder how do these parents expect the child to figure it out. There have also been cases that have reached the news because of the extent of the injuries, and many times the parents refered to it as "educational."

 
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April 8, 2008, 2:23 am PDT

Jaya

As a woman who was born with a serious orthodpedic birth defect, I went through more operations than even my mother remembers (I started with the whole business at 9 months old when I fell shortly after I started walking - the  bone didn't heal and the condition was diagnosed).

 

My condition is different than Jaya's, and now the treatment is more efficient (although essentially the same, I was just one of the first children to have the op that got me walking in the right direction).

 

But my gut feeling is that Jaya might well have have a happier childhood if his legs are amputated than if he has to go through years of surgeries. And, from what I noticed from my own childhood is that scars and limps make a bigger target for the cruelty of children than prostheses.

 

Many, many hugs and hope to this child and the family.

 

By the way, the first major op I had that got me walking was at Sick Kids in Toronto. I lived in the USA at that time, and they still weren't doing that kind of op anywhere in the United States.

 

My love to Sick Kids and Toronto, Canada forever!!!!!!!

 

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