I've learned that having parents that think I know everything, and talk of so many expectations I should maintain, and when I'm actually doing the same thing they wish for, they think whenever I make a response, I'm trying to be a know-it-all....that I'm suddenly aware of the totality of all there is to the universe.
Right, I'm not responsible for trying to learn things for myself when they've spammed that I'll have to think for myself eventually.
Especially when they didn't attend college, and I'm telling them how to make it through college, suddenly trying to become aware of as many possibilities is me "trying to think that I know everything."
Okay, paying large sums of debt, trying to understand the real world, trying to take your advice, and still being indirectly told that I "think I know everything."
Parent: "Oh no, I payed the bills."
Oh, so you're thinking that I'm ungrateful for all you've done for me? Right.
I'm so sorry that I'm trying to grow up and that you don't realize that I'm trying to learn things that I HAVE to learn by myself. I'm sorry that you're obviously showing that you're losing faith in your child by restricting them from doing things that aren't even bad in the first place.
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I also learned parents tend to think that because they've nurtured and "teach" their child, they forget that they're doing it so they can become independent and learn how to think for themselves.
Fearful that creating independence for that child at an early age will mess up their lives, when spoiling them with unnecessary things, not setting practical limits (like not drive drunk, or not put your private part into a high speed razor sharp fan) is going to mess them up in the long run.
What will little Johnny do if he realizes he ran out of money?
Call mommy and use her credit card?
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Clearly shouldn't try to improve on what you tell us not to follow, and trying not be become a disappointment to you, making us carry burdens of having to do so much.
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Yes, we should teach teenage boys (17+ and are able to get a job and start making an income mind you) that they should be in the mindset that Mommy and Daddy are super heroes, and clearly aren't humans that have flaws at all. Let's completely ignore that being a doctor, lawyer, or anything with Applied Science clearly will lead to a dull and boring world with no significant discoveries.
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Yes, understanding that contradicting expectations is going to make us fail is clearly us knowing everything. Yes, by that one little concept, we suddenly possess the totality of all mysteries and unknowns in the universe. Just by one concept.
Not condescending enough for the child? Right.
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Yeah, the child obviously is doing something wrong. Trying to live up to their parent's expectations, then undermined the moment they have the potential to deviate from them and actually do what the parents want them to do: Excel in life, and become successful (having constant flow of income, stable family, whatever you think is considered successful).
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Don't ya just love authoritative parenthood that should be a system of guiding your child to their potential and seeing them blossom? Don't ya love the apparent condescending demeanor behind it all?
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