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Ananisapta's avatar

This will be, at best, a peripheral comment but it's really on my mind wrt the whole topic of why kids are so unhappy. I'm in the final chapter of "The Identity Trap" by Yascha Mounk (which mentions Jon Haidt peripherally) and am finding it a revelation. Finally I begin to understand some of the jargon regarding human relationships that has shown up in academia lately (as an ABPN-certified general psychiatrist with over thirty years clinical experience, I thought I knew something about this topic already). Mounk thoroughly debunks the whole direction of our American academia's preoccupation with group identities as a trend that pushes separation and resentments above considerations that most classic liberals have viewed more positively, such as equal treatment and free speech. This topic puts me in mind of how negative the media have become, and the more "liberal" the more negative it seems. I read about WWII, I heard about Korea, but Vietnam was in my living room every evening and from there we seems to have spiraled into an endless rumination about how badly America has failed in its obligations. Then I recall how we as an entire nation went to war on two fronts, defeating Hitler and Tojo, then rehabilitated our former enemies and helped them become the greatest democratic and economic competitors in the world. Then I think about how the average American newborn can expect to live to age 80 whereas 40 used to be the norm. Then I think that I've been ever so fortunate to have grown up in the best time and place of history as far as I know it, and I start hoping that the rest of America will not look back on this as some sort of lost Eden. Just my loose association of the moment, but maybe part of the reason our kids are hopeless is that now that's what they learn in school and from their media immersion?

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Ruth Gaskovski's avatar

Wonderful to discover that the message of "The Anxious Generation" and the "Let Grow" programs has been translated into film! Looking forward to sharing the documentary with my readers :)

Having stories come to life visually will offer added inspiration for parents who would like to offer their children a childhood of free-play, independence, and resilience. Among our homeschooling community, the "free-rage" version of childhood is still a current reality. Academic learning is only one part of the equation in preparing our children for adulthood, and surprisingly the other part does not require us to do more for them, but less.

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