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General Parenting
Fascination with violence
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<blockquote data-quote="Star*" data-source="post: 490274" data-attributes="member: 4964"><p>Due to the level of violence Dude saw at a very young age and retained? It did have a lot to do with how he perceived things and how he played with other children. It took a life-time to change it. I'm not talking Daddy yelled at Mommy, but even that has an impact on a young child. </p><p></p><p>So as Dude grew up? The normal things that a lot of parents allow their chldren to play with - Army things - army games, toy guns, cowboys and Indians - bows and arrows...things like that for him were out. We found alternative games. Video games were OUT. When he got into his teens? It was inevitable that he would go to other friends homes and play racing games on Xbox or PS2 - andhe did. So at some point you loose that battle, but what goes on in your own home, the books you allow them, the way things are conducted in your own home and how you explain the rest of the world being NOT SO NICE - is up to you. </p><p></p><p>Hugs</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Star*, post: 490274, member: 4964"] Due to the level of violence Dude saw at a very young age and retained? It did have a lot to do with how he perceived things and how he played with other children. It took a life-time to change it. I'm not talking Daddy yelled at Mommy, but even that has an impact on a young child. So as Dude grew up? The normal things that a lot of parents allow their chldren to play with - Army things - army games, toy guns, cowboys and Indians - bows and arrows...things like that for him were out. We found alternative games. Video games were OUT. When he got into his teens? It was inevitable that he would go to other friends homes and play racing games on Xbox or PS2 - andhe did. So at some point you loose that battle, but what goes on in your own home, the books you allow them, the way things are conducted in your own home and how you explain the rest of the world being NOT SO NICE - is up to you. Hugs [/QUOTE]
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