12-09-2007, 10:35 PM | #1 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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Whats The Matter With Men?
Though its source is typically biased, rarely objective, and very suspicious, I found a review for a book that seems to hit a massive issue that I see going mostly under-the-radar. I think Im going to buy the book, since the topic does interest me, and is certainly relevant.
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12-10-2007, 01:50 AM | #2 (permalink) |
Upright
Location: Cape Town, South Africa
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Interesting... I played loads of games growing up, and I often feel as though my life would be more complete if there way an army of undead for me to slay
Always just thought it was because I'm not a typical Type-A personality...
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Sigs are overrated... |
12-10-2007, 02:16 AM | #3 (permalink) |
Location: Iceland
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Heh, I was obsessed with video games growing up, all the way through my early teens. I probably would benefit from being on ADHD medication, given my propensity to need constantly-changing stimuli every few minutes. And I completely lack motivation in school or a career (all academic drive left me when I started college). I must be a teenage male!!!!!
Oh wait, I'm a 28 year old female. I did, however, grow up on a lot of land, so when I wasn't blistering my fingers on the Nintendo (literally--I often had Band-Aids on my thumbs, to keep playing), I was outside climbing trees and building forts. I think that's one of the few things that kept me somewhat sane as a kid... being grounded to tangible activities in the outdoors. I don't think that's a gender thing, really. Every kid, male or female, would benefit from spending as much of their free time as possible in a safe, huge outdoor area with lots of stuff to explore. The second they start getting addicted to video games or TV, they should be hung using thumbscrews in a doorway. At least, I wish someone had done that to me.
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12-10-2007, 03:09 AM | #4 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: San Francisco
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Maybe there's more to life than "real-world success" and "real-world achievement", which as far as I can tell are just code words for making lots of money. So if we enjoy "sitting around eating ice cream and watching TV with the kids", what is the big fucking problem? What exactly are we supposed to be doing, going out and killing something? Getting rich so we can consume even more than your average oversize American lifestyle? This is the same hobby horse ridden by anti-drug crusaders. Personally I think this obsession with success is their problem, not ours.
I, for one, welcome our college-educated female overlords.
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"Prohibition will work great injury to the cause of temperance. It is a species of intemperance within itself, for it goes beyond the bounds of reason in that it attempts to control a man's appetite by legislation, and makes a crime out of things that are not crimes. A Prohibition law strikes a blow at the very principles upon which our government was founded." --Abraham Lincoln Last edited by n0nsensical; 12-10-2007 at 03:52 AM.. |
12-10-2007, 06:47 AM | #5 (permalink) |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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She's correct on all counts.
The education system is biased against boys, ADHD is a joke in most of the people getting the medication, and videogames do waste a ton of your potential. Luckily for my son I've known this and I will have the means to send him to a private school as well as teach him on his own. My parents did this for me because the public school couldn't handle me, and I see the same signs in my son. They spent hours with me on homework and discipline, first to undo the damage of my first 4 school years in a public school, then to focus me and motivate me to what seemed boring and pointless. For example at age 8 I was in the bottom of my class (having convinced my teachers I wasn't able to do it) yet going to the library almost day to learn about spiders and insects at a level most people wouldn't see unless they went into invertebrate biology, on my own. My parents were unaware of this as well and it took an IQ test where they were looking for learning disabilities to discover that I didn't have a learning disability, I was just bored. I was a bit of an extreme, but boys simply learn differently then girls, but the schools are not designed for this, mostly because for years we had well meaning idiots try to tell us that it was just society that made men different from women as well as the fact its EASIER to teach girls. Girls can learn from textbooks much sooner than boys, while boys are very hands on. Which is easier for a lazy public school union teacher to teach?
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12-10-2007, 07:23 AM | #6 (permalink) |
Upright
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Well it tend to be true that girls tend to be more academic than boys although I'm sure that games doesn't actually fry people brains. Although it's more to the fact that some teachers are seriously bad at teaching or we guys just don't want to learn what they are forcing us to learn. But then again, this is matter of opinion.
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12-10-2007, 08:02 AM | #7 (permalink) |
Lover - Protector - Teacher
Location: Seattle, WA
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Hey look! More biased, UNRESEARCHED opinion about how great women are and how bad men are.
I haven't seen this before. It's funny that I don't see any citation from research, only "Sax writes" and 'Sax believes'. I wonder why?
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12-10-2007, 08:06 AM | #8 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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Its true, and the learning part is very much backed up by research, I don't have the references with me but would it matter? I've personally always thought ADHD is mostly just boys being boys. And I've seen how video games negatively affect people.
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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12-10-2007, 08:43 AM | #9 (permalink) |
Knight of the Old Republic
Location: Winston-Salem, NC
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ADHD = parents don't want to control their brat so they give them sedatives and say he's ADHD.
Videogames frying your brain = doubtful. Is it a waste of time? Yeah, but so is watching TV, and many (if not most) Americans watch TV for hours a day. As for younger boys being unmotivated, I have sorta noticed this trend, but I definitely can't explain it. I'm 24, just graduated college and am now making more than the average American. I won't stop until I'm rich. I will do any amount of work to be a wealthy, hard working member of this society. I play videogames a lot and am obsessed with computers. Certainly no correlation in my case. |
12-10-2007, 08:48 AM | #10 (permalink) | |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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If you observe the typical child's daily pastimes today, it will be little wonder why they can't concentrate on something that doesn't have flashy lights, catchy music, or hyper-interactivity. Reading? Writing? You can't be serious. * * * * * I will comment on this thread in more depth when I have the time.
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12-10-2007, 08:01 PM | #12 (permalink) | |
warrior bodhisattva
Super Moderator
Location: East-central Canada
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Knowing that death is certain and that the time of death is uncertain, what's the most important thing? —Bhikkhuni Pema Chödrön Humankind cannot bear very much reality. —From "Burnt Norton," Four Quartets (1936), T. S. Eliot |
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12-10-2007, 08:22 PM | #13 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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Sorry you set yourself up for that one Baraka is right though, the issue won't be for another 10 years or so, maybe even 20. When these guys should be hitting their prime in their late 30's and 40's, and even then it won't be a HUGE change, not ever male is going to fall into going through life fat drunk and stupid trap.
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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12-10-2007, 10:43 PM | #14 (permalink) |
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
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I think this book, and the supposed "problem" it identifies, are both a bunch of bunk. Boys learn differently? There's no such thing as ADHD, or its dramatically over-diagnosed? Boys need to be outdoors, girls inside learning with books? Please. Not only is there no legitimate science backing any of these claims up, but these are all historical social norms undermined by changing attitudes towards (or new discoveries about) gender, sex, biology, psychology, psychiatry, and education. It's the ugly underside of our national id that that stresses physically active boys and nice little girls. This stuff was very popular a hundred years ago; Teddy Roosevelt's childhood/early adulthood, to use his example, was practically a case study of a sickly little kid trying to prove his manhood through vigorous outdoorsy activities - a true product of his times. There is no boy crisis in education, and the only real gender gap that truly appears is the one with a glass ceiling and seventy-five cents on the dollar.
P.S. There is a very strong correlation between the advancements women have made in American society, culture, and business, and the return of this "manly man" > overprotected/arrested development manchild creed.
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12-11-2007, 11:20 AM | #15 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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as an aside, i watched the deep sea epsiode of "blue planet" last night and found something kinda suspect about it...
the voice-over sets up you the viewer up as discovering new species while you sit on your sofa in your livingroom. so sitting on your sofa becomes this great adventure which enables you to encompass all the hidden dimensions of the world. sitting on your sofa enables you to withstand huge pressures. through your intrepid explorations from your sofa in your living room, your bravery, you, sitting on your sofa, you acquire a Heroic Destiny: you are the leading edge of human technological progress, you are the first human to see this or that amazingly beautiful multi-colored gelatinous blob----here is a new species, you are the camera, nothing can hide from you. you are a sardine swirling around in a vast cloud to hide from predators where no hiding is possible; you bounce off the surface of a concentrated salt lake a half mile beneath the surface of the gulf of mexico. and you do all this with curious electronic sounds unfolding the source of which is not obvious--are these foley effects, are they feeds from a microphone does it matter? i enjoyed it...well, except for having grown tired of david attenborough's particular way of indicating breathless excitement and the writer's size-queen fixation (the largest, the smallest, the widest, the thinnest, the most dry, the most lint-filled, the most, the best, the rarest, the least rare, the heaviest, the lighest)...but it seems suspect. i look out my window now and its a grey rainy chicago afternoon. i think about blue planet. 3-d doesn't stand a chance. so it goes in the land of the sovereign spectator. ================ that said, i dont buy much of anything that the reviewer chose to highlight from sax's book. his website is slightly more informative, once you get past the large amounts of publicity nonsense that outlines for you the enormity of expertise that is crammed into this book that you that's right you should scurry out right now and purchase. he checks many of the consequences of that idiot "no child left behind" refashioning of public education into a vast test-prep industry, the choking off of funding at the expense of gym classes, recesses, art and music classes...which seem both ill-advised and to embody a fear of creativity and even of embodied activity in favor of the construction of the sovereign spectator-----get them early and often-----revenue streams will only be improved if kids understand themselves as powerless spectators relative to information early. i am not sure that sax is pointing to anything beyond the shape of his own research and the inferences he makes based on that. nor do i understand how he makes causal claims---ultimately i suppose, the question really is whether you find the idea of such claims interesting enough to read the actual book. but it's hard to figure out how we can have a real debate about this if none of is have read the book.
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12-11-2007, 11:24 AM | #16 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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Do you really want to stick by the notion that boys do not learn differently than girls at an early age? If so I will be happy to give you a strong scientific beat down, but before I do that I'd recommend you do a bit of research on your own.
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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12-11-2007, 02:40 PM | #17 (permalink) |
Psycho
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I never really saw video games as a cause, only a symptom. Lacking something more stimulating, one plays video games. Nothings wrong with games themselves, but I do believe that theres better, more nourishing ways to spend time. I say this as an avid gamer. Apparently with some guilt. heh.
But games arent the important part, to me. The part that sticks out to me, first, is the discussion about whether or not boys learn better through different means of education. Secondly, the concept, role, and potential of a male role-model... Are there trends in what boys learn with vs without that kind of teacher? Third, the implications of mens future IF this articles prophesizing is on-the-mark. At worst, the male-slump would never stick; we would fix it. But it would still be an ugly slump and a very strange handful of decades. Its hard to say whether or not I agree with anything else touched on in the article, but Ill tell ya this... On average, the guys I know are generally lazier than the girls I know. Of the people I know, I feel like I see girls striving to achieve their goals more-so than guys. Unfortunately, Im not keeping track, so all I can do is feel unsettled by my untrustworthy gut reaction. |
12-11-2007, 03:18 PM | #18 (permalink) |
Upright
Location: Everett, WA
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Well there are a couple of assumptions in that article and these responses one of them being who said girls dont play videogames i know quite a few that do maybe not as much as most of my friends that are guys but still some. Also video games themselves arent the cause of the negative effects its the time spent playing them instead of being productive and honestly of the people who dont play games which spend the time being productive? Plus while guys spend more time on games and things girls (this is a generalization) usually spend more time then guys on hygenic issues I know a few who wake up as much as 2 to 3 hours before they have to do anything to get ready couldnt this be used better? As for ADD and ADHD I believe personally that this is an excuse for other things but this isn't about that. As for motivation i suppose this is true but, its not just boys I believe the cause for this lack of motivation is partially due to the great rise in technology and having more things be done for us. For example we no longer wash clothes by hand or dishes really. All of these things instill less and less of the value of hard work. Kids think they can do just the minimum and throw the rest in the "machine" and let it do the work. Also the restrictments on child abuse which i am strictly against dont get me wron are a huge part of it part of the motivation used to be "do this so you dont get smacked" anyway thats how i feel on this whole issue although i doubt most will read my whole rant.
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12-11-2007, 05:22 PM | #20 (permalink) | ||
Pissing in the cornflakes
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That took about a half a second to google. Secondly I never said it wasn't real, I said it was joke in most getting medication for it. So girlfriend, please, don't get in a pissing contest with me when it comes to biology, I got a firehose.
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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12-11-2007, 05:35 PM | #21 (permalink) | ||
Somnabulist
Location: corner of No and Where
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BTW, I happen to think that most of those learning differences are created, enforced, and solidified by social norms rather than inherent biological differences. Girls are observed to be more studious, less rowdy, and quieter in class than boys because our social norms from infant's toys to interpersonal behavior tell boys that they should be extroverts and girls the opposite. EDIT - I agree with the above poster who mentioned that none of us have read this book. I don't claim to know what is in it, nor do I mean to give the impression that I'm giving a book review. I'm just going with the general topic...
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12-11-2007, 05:48 PM | #23 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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12-14-2007, 06:44 PM | #26 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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After reading the OP, I'm of the opinion that Christine, the author, may very well be simply having bad luck finding a man herself. I myself am living proof that her article is quite simply incorrect at most or a gross stereotype at least. I graduated from high school early, wen to college on my own dime where I received high marks in all subjects and graduated in 4 years, and I immediately used my connections to get a good job. I occasionally enjoy playing Star Wars Battlefront on my PlayStation 2. I'm taking a few classes now and plan to go back to school to get my masters in political science so that I can become an attorney (business work is starting to bore me). I'm dripping with motivation, but not only that, most of the men I know are also dripping with motivation. One friend is already rising through the ranks quickly at a national bank and another has a very successful web company selling auto parts at the age of 23.
If you're so lazy that you think you need Mario or a school teacher to motivate you, you're probably already SOL in life because unmotivated people are boring and are rarely successful at what they attempt, if they ever get around to attempting it. Self motivation really is the only good motivation, and the author would go a long way by learning that. Last edited by Willravel; 12-23-2007 at 09:17 AM.. Reason: removed multiple "but not only that"s |
12-23-2007, 09:15 AM | #29 (permalink) |
Upright
Location: Montreal
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I think the author is taking issues that affect us as a society and showing only the way it directly affects males. Does she mention other drugs females are being prescribed or taking that changes their behavior (I'm looking at you period removing drug). Doesn't she think maybe our education system altogether isn't very good but that women and men are affected differently by this? Why doesn't she mention that while a lot of men play video game this usually replaces normal tv watching time that both males and females have? Why doesn't she say females also have horrible role models such as Paris Hilton? And how does she reach the conclusion that the male species is getting destroyed by these issues?
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everything will be OK in the end. if it's not OK, it's not the end. unknown
Last edited by samurai_x44; 12-23-2007 at 09:21 AM.. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
12-23-2007, 09:59 AM | #30 (permalink) |
peekaboo
Location: on the back, bitch
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So, what was boys' excuse before video games?
Like Ustwo, I was a bad student, given to bouts of daydreaming, wandering off(figuratively and literally-I'd walk out of class, signing myself out on the bathroom chart). Imagine the surprise of several teachers and the principal when my IQ test revealed a higher than average score....yea, girls do it all too. But I could write stories like no one's business from first grade on. I had to take my son to counselling after an altercation in 4th grade in which he beat another kid over the head with his lunchbag-this after months of bullying. An ADD "test" was given and Daniel matched all ten markers. Ritalin was suggested at almost every session and I said "No drugs. He has to learn behaviors, not mask them." I have friends whose boys were put on that crap and, according to protocol, taken off it at 18 and they became violent, unable to control urges and landed in jail. We have become a nation of blame. It's video games, it's tv, it's green grass, whatever....whatever happen to consequence? Discipline? Learning how to get on in this world, whether being taught only by the parents(whom I blame for most of this angst) or seeking outside help like I did? Your son's not living up to his potential? So drug him? How about giving him the tools to foster his talents? Allowing some choice so he learns what happens when he makes the wrong one? Talking to the kid? Yea, I'm so out of touch with the "real" problem.... I won't even glance at books and articles such as these because they're bullshit. They blame everything but what should be blamed. Parents that are afraid of parenting. |
12-25-2007, 02:23 AM | #31 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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On a side note, I really dont feel like this particular reviewer is focusing on video games as a cause (And Ill bet Sax wasnt either). It seems to me like its just a symptom of lessened engagement on real-world matters. So if parenting being a major flaw if a kid is under-achieving, so heres a tough question: What, specifically, are people doing wrong in their parenting? Or is this entire subject a red herring? Are boys doing just fine, and there is, in fact, NOT a widening gap in the ratio of male-to-female scholastic achievement? |
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12-25-2007, 05:12 AM | #32 (permalink) | |
Eponymous
Location: Central Central Florida
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I don't think parenting is the only factor here, though. Combine it with growing up with MTV and advertising stylized after it -- those images flash way too fast, they're almost like that ringtone the kids can hear but the adults can't. It comes down to short attention span and parents' low expectations. In a nutshell, that's how I see it. |
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12-26-2007, 05:38 AM | #35 (permalink) |
A Storm Is Coming
Location: The Great White North
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[QUOTE=Lasereth]ADHD = parents don't want to control their brat so they give them sedatives and say he's ADHD.
QUOTE] It's not a one size fits all world. My 2nd-grader was finally diagnosed with ADD in 1984, long before it was popular. His teachers said he would grow out of it. He didn't. Unfortunately, medication didn't work, either. Therapy helped some, mainly for us his parents. The biggest thing was the relief of developing an understanding of what was going on. So we thought. Now, I'm sure some parents want to medicate their kids because they can't control them. Odd, though, that an amphetamine can control a hyperactive kid, isn't it. I mean, isn't that a contradiction of the kid was normal? But I stray from my tale. Flash forward to today. Our 30-year old is bi-polar. Unfortunately, many kids during at least the 80s were diagnosed with ADD when there was someother mental illness developing. Had he been disagnosed correctly back then he may have been better off today. We'll never know. Instead, drugs came into the picture and you know how those stories go. Back to my original comment: be careful how you judge because it's not a one size fits all world.
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01-11-2008, 01:39 AM | #36 (permalink) |
Location: Canada
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Nothing wrong with video games, or ADD (or ADHD whichever you want to call it) I have both and grew up to be an investment banker who makes lots of money, provides for his family and is still obsessed with video games.
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01-13-2008, 11:53 AM | #37 (permalink) |
immoral minority
Location: Back in Ohio
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She fails to realize the impact of the persuit of sex for boys is once they get to Junior High. An interesting survey would be, you can be an A student, but not have sex because you are too busy with school work. Or you can be a C-D student that has free time to socialize and sleep with a few girls. Which one would you choose?
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01-17-2008, 02:35 PM | #38 (permalink) | |
Psycho
Location: venice beach, ca
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it seems to me that people villify owning up to their mistakes and/or apologizing for them, and as a result, it's extremely difficult for people to do it. they miss out on the benefits of internalizing these lessons learned and the therapeutic rewards of forgiving yourself after you've made a mistake, and this results in even more stubborn denial. it's an awful cycle.
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01-17-2008, 10:31 PM | #39 (permalink) |
<3 TFP
Location: 17TLH2445607250
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Hmmm... this is interesting.
First of all, ADHD, at least at the symptomatic level, does indeed exist. I know! The symptoms of it basically equate to an overactive/restless mind. It is very difficult for me to concentrate on tasks, and the less interested I am in them, the more difficult it is. I mean difficult as in the following scenario, which plays itself in classrooms from the time I was 14 until right now: 1. Go into class and sit down 2. Teaching begins 3. I begin to get distracted with other thoughts, though I'm fighting to concentrate on the task at hand 4. I begin to fidget 5. I suddenly (VERY suddenly) become extremely tired 6. I spend the rest of the classtime time using every ounce of willpower I have to stay awake It's not a discipline or willpower issue. This even happens (though to a lesser degree) in classes that I am 100% interested in. Regardless of this, I had a miserable time in high school. Actually, it sounded a lot like Ustwo's public schools experience. My folks couldn't send me to private school and didn't have the education to teach me much at home. I found that by 7th grade I knew subject matter better than MOST of my teachers, and by high school the AP/Honors content I was learning was at a level I had already learned. I dropped out of high school my senior year, got my GED and went to a VERY good engineering school. The kicker? My GED and ACT scores were high enough that not only did I not have to go through the "mandatory" probation time at OU as a GED-bearer, I didn't even have the "mandatory" freshman probation before being allowed to enter the School of Engineering. I was admitted my first semester. I am socially well adjusted. I have a lot of friends that are all pretty different (I'm often the 'link' between disparate groups of friends). Sure, some are geeks, but many are not. I am married to a wonderful woman. I have two great sons. I have a good job. I can work with people very well. I can outsmart them if I need to, but generally can adjust to talk on anyone's level, low or high, based on the person I am addressing. *shrug* So, back to the OP. Are young men less motivated? Yes. But I see it as a primarily American cultural issue. American culture breeds laziness and ineptitude, from vastly overused social programs to vastly underfunded education and extracurricular programs. Hey, you want to be a fat sack of shit with 20 kids and a meth problem? Here's some free money to live on. Hey, you're a brilliant student and an amazing musician? Well fuck off... we can't afford good teachers and your school doesn't have a music program anymore! Gee, I can't imagine where the problem lies. As for the sudden increase in females being marketable. Well, that's still backlash from suffrage and ERA-era buildup. Women can NOW do things that men have been allowed to do forever. They're taking advantage of it. Good for them! My wife will have her degree before me, despite being 6 years younger. I still make better money than she likely would after she gets it. I also sit on my ass at a desk job all day, and when she is finished with school she'll be chasing kids on the playground at school. *shrug* Sometimes it's a matter of aptitude for different things. There are more geek guys than girls, or more specifically in the geek category that tends to be a money maker (IT). My wife is a band geek. It's hard for a band geek to make good money. I'm a computer geek. It's easy for a computer geek with no degree to make GREAT money. It's a subculture thing at that level. I know this is sort of a jumbled rant. Hope you all followed. Let me leave you with another thought. Why do I believe this is American? look at other countries, western and otherwise. Take Japan for instance. Fast food is hitting HUGE over there, and video gaming is as big or bigger than in the States. However, they have more discipline, better education (with much MUCH more emphasis on education) and culturally kick our asses in such regards. It's not young men, it's under-challenged, over-pampered, lazy American young men. :-|
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01-17-2008, 11:49 PM | #40 (permalink) | |
Pissing in the cornflakes
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I manged to get a couple of advanced degrees with this 'disorder' and never took a drug for it.
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Agents of the enemies who hold office in our own government, who attempt to eliminate our "freedoms" and our "right to know" are posting among us, I fear.....on this very forum. - host Obama - Know a Man by the friends he keeps. |
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