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greatauntoftriplets Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-04 07:23 AM
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The meaninglessness of modern life....
Reasons to be cheerless

The meaninglessness of modern life exposes us to such despair that we need more than a stiff upper lip to cope

Madeleine Bunting
Monday March 1, 2004
The Guardian

A quarter of children aged between four and six say they are "stressed out", and the proportion rises to just over half of children under 16, reported a survey published late last week. It's getting just too much. Children who should have no thoughts in their heads but how to skip, kick a football and splash poster paint around are cracking up.
Evidence of the increasing incidence of children's mental ill-health is reaching mountainous proportions: self-harm, attention deficit disorder, depression and obsessive behaviour have all increased sharply among children in recent years. So this survey, conducted by a market research company, TNS, wasn't saying anything we hadn't already heard plenty of times before.

What was interesting was how this survey was reported as "Britain in danger of breeding a generation of emotional weaklings": this generation of children was more cosseted than any previous one, and more neurotic, and perhaps the two phenomena were connected. The Times concluded in a leader that we are fast becoming a nation of "emotional hypochondriacs" as stress is transformed into a disease by a growing industry of therapists, counsellors and lawyers eager for new business.

The coverage reflected an increasingly popular view that the growing incidence of stress and depression is a bad case of the emperor's new clothes. We've turned our personal shortcomings into a disease. Individualism has generated chronic self-indulgence and hugely inflated aspirations to happiness while sapping our will to overcome adversity. Past generations had much worse to deal with, but showed stoicism, forbearance and fortitude. Chimney sweeps and match girls had no time to worry about stress; they were too concerned about where their next meal was coming from. While parents once buried their tiny children in droves and suffered pestilence, war and poverty with a cheerful smile, we are running to the therapist's couch over the smallest setback. It can all be boiled down to "Buck up!"

http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1159056,00.html

greataunt's comment: This makes me very sad.
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ayeshahaqqiqa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-04 07:29 AM
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1. Kids
should be allowed to be kids. No pressure on them to take tests or be labeled a failure at six. They should be honored and cherished as individuals. Maybe one way to do this is to throw out the telly. That box is something that can give one a lot of stress, and something kids don't need to watch. Families can go out for walks, build things together, play games together. This interrelationship can help alleviate stress. Of course, having an economy that supports families rather than tearing them apart via low wages/no benefits would help too.
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izzie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-04 08:35 AM
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2. Is not this a thing that has been said for ever?
???????????
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