Posted on 03/21/2020 7:35:29 AM PDT by Kaslin
Thanks to being quarantined at home, were all spending more time on social media harping about how horrible we have it. As a country, were facing an unknown pandemic that has the potential to kill hundreds of thousands of people and as a result, our government has taken drastic measures to curtail its spread by asking, or in some cases forcing us to self-quarantine.
Out of all this, do you know who has it the worst? Is it medical professionals faced with the thought deciding who will live and die because of shortages of life saving equipment? Nope. Is it retirees who have seen a large percentage of their life savings wiped out overnight who now wonder if they will ever recover financially? Nope, not them either. Is it the people who are already facing life-threatening illnesses who cannot access normal health care channels because their treatment center has been overwhelmed with infected people? Nah. How about people who have lost their source of income and are now faced with the real possibility of not being able to pay for food or shelter. Are you kidding? Theyll be fine.
Who are the biggest victims of this pandemic? Its high school seniors of course. They finished just ahead of people whose favorite sport was cancelled. Runners up include people now dealing with their kids at home, those who are on their last roll of toilet paper, and those whose favorite grocery item is not on the shelf. Oh, the humanity!
Suck it up buttercups.
As a society these days, we generally agree on nothing, but everyone over 40 universally agrees that the youngest generation of marshmallows needs a hefty dose of toughness, stat! News flash: toughness is forged during hard times.
I have some shocking news for all those whining about some sort of inconvenience this crisis has brought to their precious, made for Pinterest world. Perhaps you should sit down to hear this. Are you ready for it? No one cares.
You know who had it tough when their baby was a senior in high school? Hundreds of thousands of mothers whose sons draft numbers were called during WWII, Korea, and Vietnam. Thats who. Imagine your childs graduation ceremony knowing that he would be getting on a bus and heading off to boot camp days after graduation followed by a trip to the front. That group of mothers got no sympathy from all their mom friends on social media. They just dealt with it. Meanwhile, your baby is being asked to stay in the house for now and that track, prom, and other Spring school activities have been cancelled. Big deal. If you really want to do them a favor, take away their phone, computer and every other electronic device during this time and have them learn how to deal with it. You might be shocked how resilient they actually become.
The I had it tougher than you game does not end well for most anyone born after 1980, at least until now. Personally, Ive lived through several wars, stock market crashes, national emergencies, a serious nuclear threat from our enemies, terrorist attacks and other threats and calamities to include the administrations of Jimmy Carter and even Barack Obama. Yet somehow, I lived.
Given that, I would never trade my life for that of my grandparents who lived through the Great Depression, WWII and Jimmy Carter. They definitely had it worse. And, you know what? They wouldnt have traded their lives for those in Europe who lived through WWII or worse yet, survived a concentration camp. I wouldnt trade the worst financial predicament of any U.S. citizen with that of the bottom rung of anyone living in Venezuela, Cuba, or North Korea.
Its all about perspective. Sure, youre being asked to forego your childs senior recognition night, but thats far better than having her grandfather suffer and die due to a lack of ventilators in his overcrowded hospital because you just had to hear your kids name read aloud and share the picture of 8th grade graduation on Facebook. Teach your kids that their sacrifices are first small, and second noble and for a higher cause.
As parents, or anyone having an influence in the lives of the next generations, it is our duty to instill in them a sense of toughness which we have up to this point mostly failed to do. I think anyone of a reasonable age would look back on their life and measure it by the times they were pushed the hardest. They will tell you about a time when they thought all hope was lost, yet they persevered. They will tell you that this was when they grew the most. That time for the next generations is now. Dont let them seek victimhood. Dont allow them the easy way out.
No one ever welcomes adversity, but we should because it is exactly that which makes us stronger. Unless of course, it kills us, then its just a bit too much adversity. So, as the old Army saying goes, Embrace the suck.
Every situation in life forces us to make choices. Right now we can choose to teach our children that they have been robbed of some precious right like prom, senior sneak, or graduation, or we can teach them to be thankful for what they have. We have a wonderful opportunity to instill in them that during tough times everyone in a community is forced to make sacrifices. We can help them learn that this makes us stronger and more resilient to future threats. Or, we can teach them to be the whining little self-absorbed babies and create yet another group of victims who think they deserve some new entitlement for their new victim class.
The choice is ours to make.
AMEN!, Steve. It has been written the LORD never gives us more than we can handle. If THIS is what he has given this generation .... draw your own conclusions.
And even now it hasn't crossed that line. Heck, I remember being so poor I held my poop until I got to work to cut my TP budget.
TMI!
Just give them all a trophy, a box of crayons and tell them they are in a safe space.
Oh, snap!
Mine never had these luxuries. Pre cell phones/computers. We didn’t even have a landline. Wanted what I couldn’t afford, go mow yards. Days food didn’t stretch to 3. I went hungry so growing boys had a hot dog & mac in cheese.
My eldest will soon be 50, youngest 40. Eldest makes his HS Senior work, pay own cell and car ins on a 30 yr old hand me down car. Youngest has a 2 1/2 yr old to provide for.
What are you afraid of? Sit them down, make them pay attention to current events and maybe they’ll learn something new.
I caught my kid last night cruising Free Republic. She’s not quite a kid, she’s 22. I encouraged her to create an account. I’m not sure if I want know her online identity. She can probably identify my posts, if she strips away my sometimes semi-foul language, which I do not use in front of her.
I have a college senior and two high schoolers. I think it’s OK to allow some disappointment about the missed HS graduations, proms, field trips, and spring sports.
But yes this should help a generation learn some resiliency. And we now will have a generation of preppers, who will always keep TP and rice on hand, and who will have a new appreciation for independence, closed borders, family, home schooling, and home cooking. Conservatism.
We are (so far, not stir crazy yet) enjoying the homeschooling, sleeping in, and family time. My husband and I are blessed and lucky enough to both have jobs (secure so far) that easily can be (and now are) 100% telework.
I’m hoping to be part of the 30% that doesn’t get the virus—I haven’t left the house since Sat and don’t plan to for a long time, regardless of what the gov’t says.
Right on.
I was on the phone with my mom yesterday and told her that one of the cool benefits will be millennial types figuring out what a screwdriver is used for because they can no longer call a guy to do the simple stuff.
At the end of the day, most household repairs, even major ones are pretty easy. I learned that when I tore all the plumbing out of my first house and replaced it, after teaching myself to sweat copper pipe the night before.
This emergency has been addressed by destroying the economy.
We'll see what's left of the "buttercups" after they've been trampled into the ground.
And when you lose your job?
Look, I have been tracking this since December. Been mocked here, called a fool, and hated.
But at some point we have to do a serious calculation if we, as a nation, can survive a total shutdown as a civilization.
I am not sure we can.
Before social media, maybe you would have griped about something to your spouse, your neighbor, your best friend ... and they would have said, “Yeah, it’s too bad, but that’s life!” and you soldier on.
Now, everyone gets to the be the tragic hero or heroine of their own reality-show psychodrama. Everyone pretends to believe everyone else’s sob story, pretends to sympathize with their neediness, and then seeks to explain why *their* situation is much, much worse.
Read a book. Clean your closets. Go outside. Phone your church and find out if anyone needs rent money or groceries. Call your mother.
We can't even stop the one that HAS already killed over 61,000,000 future Americans!!
You lucky, lucky bastard! Oh, we used to dream about having TP at work! Just a single sheet, for the whole crew, would have been a luxury....
Heck, I remember being so poor
I held my poop until I got to work to cut my TP budget.
You lucky, lucky bastard!
Oh, we used to dream about having TP at work!
Just a single sheet, for the whole crew, would have been a luxury....
You had a job? We could only dream of having a job!
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