Friday, July 19, 2013

Virtual Parenting a Moral Failure in 21st Century

We hear parents all the time boasting about how easy it is to shut their children up by giving them the iphone or ipad or perhaps switching on a favourite TV show. There are many times we have had a good laugh about it and in many ways, we pathetic bystanders encourage our friends to continue the neglect of their children. Here's an abstract of an article taken from the Daily Telegraph written by Miranda Devine that looks at the moral failure of virtual parenting that is worth reading if you are or are going to be a parent. 

IT’S something we all know. Busy lives and technology are intruding on crucial family time.
We see the consequences around us in the rise of the unruly brat and a new lost generation of depression-prone adolescents. After all, if your parents don’t care enough to spend time with you, it’s hard to feel worthwhile.
The latest survey to sound the warning is from Virgin Holidays, which showed parents are spending less than eight hours a week of quality time with their children, on average; that breaks down to only 39 minutes per weekday, rising to just over an hour on Saturdays and Sundays.
Reasons parents gave for neglecting family time included that “the children are watching TV” or “the children are playing computer games”.
Who is the parent here? It is a woeful tale with worrying implications for the future.
A generation of children who are virtually bringing up themselves, with the help of whatever is beaming at them through their screens.
The latest survey comes off the back of another poll last year from the British Family and Parenting Institute, showing the number one thing children want is more time with their parents.
Six out of 10 kids complained their parents didn’t spend enough time with the family. Why aren’t we listening?
The one thing children need more than anything else is parental attention. It can be hard for busy parents, especially with taciturn teenagers whose idea of conversation is a sarcastic grunt.
But psychologists are warning we’re raising a generation of “Tamagotchi Kids” - children brought up by computers and TVs and smart phones.
With parents on their laptops while watching TV in one room and the children engrossed in their own digital entertainments in another, it can be easy to spend an entire evening communing less with your offspring than you did with the guy you bought your coffee from on the way to work.
It is really a facsimile of family life when everyone is isolated contentedly in their own activity.
You might be in the same house with your children but you are not doing your job as a parent. You’re not imprinting your values, imparting their worth, setting boundaries and teaching them how to be a good person.
Adolescent psychiatrist Dr Michael Carr-Gregg coined the term “Tamagotchi Parenting” after the electronic game that became a craze in Japan, in which you pressed buttons to feed and water a virtual pet.
He has been concerned about the rise of remote control parenting because it denies children the boundaries they crave. They become isolated from their parents by an “emotional firewall”, reserving their emotional relationships for friends, with whom they are permanently connected, electronically.
A Year 7 teacher once told me she saw a difference between the Generation Y she had been teaching and the new digital natives, the 12- and 13-year-olds of Generation Z coming through.
Born roughly since the mid-1990s, Gen Z is born virtually with a smart phone in their hands. They are the first post-technological revolution generation and their default reality is radically different from anything before.
But this teacher sees the dark side of her charges’ facility with digital technology. So immersed are they in their screens that she fears they are losing the ability to read facial expressions, a prerequisite for empathy.
Carr-Gregg predicts a “decline in civic connectedness and ... social capital” as a consequence.
Parenting is not like a My Three Sons episode where Big Daddy draws the children around for the latest sermon from the mount.
All the little incidental interactions when you are spending time with children add up to a coherent moral fabric with which they can fashion their character.
Mothers I know often say the best time to connect with their sons is in the car while ferrying them to sport, when they open up about their lives, comfortable with the parallel nature of the interaction, and mum too busy looking at the road to turn her laser eyes to his soul.
A full-time mother of nine children I know always makes a point of having a cup of tea alone after her husband has gone to bed so that any child who wants a private chat knows where to find her.
These surveys are a wake-up call to all of us to make spending extra time with our children the priority.
Turn off the screens, play a game, make a meal together, go for a walk, read a book aloud. Try to get that eight hours a week up to 15.
Yes, we’re all busy but most parents should be able to claw time back from less pressing activities.
Nothing is more important than bringing up the next generation. 

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

How Much Does Your Pregnancy Cost?

Just wondering whether anyone out there tracked ALL their expenses relating to their pregnancy? I was reading an article in the New York Times which claims that America is the most expensive place to give birth in the world because their health system is such a capital market that it can cost between $4,000 and $45,000 to give birth! Here's some of the article:

LACONIA, N.H. — Seven months pregnant, at a time when most expectant couples are stockpiling diapers and choosingcar seats, RenĂ©e Martin was struggling with bigger purchases.
At a prenatal class in March, she was told about epiduralanesthesia and was given the option of using a birthing tub during labor. To each offer, she had one gnawing question: “How much is that going to cost?”
Though Ms. Martin, 31, and her husband, Mark Willett, are both professionals with health insurance, her current policy does not cover maternity care. So the couple had to approach the nine months that led to the birth of their daughter in May like an extended shopping trip though the American health care bazaar, sorting through an array of maternity services that most often have no clear price and — with no insurer to haggle on their behalf — trying to negotiate discounts from hospitals and doctors.

When she became pregnant, Ms. Martin called her local hospital inquiring about the price of maternity care; the finance office at first said it did not know, and then gave her a range of $4,000 to $45,000. “It was unreal,” Ms. Martin said. “I was like, How could you not know this? You’re a hospital.”
Read the rest o the article here.

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Baby kicks, butterflies or butterfly kicks?

One of pregnancy's simple pleasures is feeling the baby kicks. Not sure whether they really are kicks or an overenthusiastic arm or a head whilst doing laps of the womb. For some mothers waiting for their first baby kick, books and magazines say that they are like a butterfly in your stomach sensation (whatever that would feel like).


Anyway, recently baby has been "kicking" quite a bit. It seems like she is most active when we are about to go to bed. So what is actually going on when the baby is kicking? Is the baby responding to some spicy food or Fanta? According to Ask.com, babies kick in response to the mother's change in position or in response to sounds. They could also kick as they flex and stretch their limbs as they develop.

In another website, they say that classical music such as Vivaldi calms the baby down but babies get agitated by Beethoven. Whilst they can hear and react, their ability to think only begins around the eight month mark.