I love it, but.... I mean, certainly a step in the right direction, but....
The 'nuclear family' concept was the Cabal's first step towards demolition of real families. They brought it in as a stepping stone to broken families, blended families, single-parent families, 'gay parent' families, all the way to where we are now ("family is a social construct")
Real families are the three-generational family. Grandparent, parents and children. A three-generational family is one in which the children have direct access to the wisdom and learnings of the past generations, via grandparents. And there is a type of love a grandchild can receive from a grandparent that is very different from the love they receive from a parent.
Children benefit most from both. Think about it.
A three-point set-up is a foundation for stability. Tripods have three legs. A circle is defined by three points. There is a reason Jesus had three main disciples, too.
A three-generational family is the real, most natural and most common form of family throughout history. In the modern era, the concept of 'nuclear family' promoted the idea that somehow, grandparents (old people) aren't that important or essential to human stability, or life. And that cut-off from the past, a family with just parents and children is enough.
As someone who grew up without having access to either set of grandparents (one set died before I was born, and one set lived on the other side of the world), I feel, more than ever, the loss of being cut-off emotionally from my past, and my roots.
Grandparents help children to understand their own parents. Children can learn about why mom and dad are they way they are, through knowing their grandparents. And, historically, in all societies, three or more generations would naturally live together in the same community, the same nest.
Modernization, immigration and industrialization impacted that heavily. Those three things are important, but even more important is us learning to re-establish the most organic, natural and beneficial structure of a real traditional family.
As someone who grew up without having access to either set of grandparents (one set died before I was born, and one set lived on the other side of the world), I feel, more than ever, the loss of being cut-off emoptionally from my past, and my roots.
Grandparents help children to understand their own parents. Children can learn about why mom and dad are they way they are, through knowing their grandparents. And, historically, in all societies, three or more generations would naturally live together in the same community, the same nest.
I completely understand your feelings at grieving the loss of someone you never got the blessing to meet. Both of my grandpas died before I turned 2. I see them in old movies holding me as a baby and it makes me smile and sad at the same time.
My grandmas were awesome though. Both so funny and genuinely caring (although they weren’t the baking cookies kind). My dad’s mom used to entertain us by telling us all the trouble he got into with his brother and sisters growing up. My mom’s mom had boxes of old photos that I loved growing through and hearing stories about the past. Enabled me to see into a different time and appreciate how easy I had it compared to what they lived through.
I appreciate the sentiment, but boy is that an unflattering name. Traditional family month would've sounded much better. Still, much better than what it was!
He finally did something great for us… on his way out the door.
Oh, the fags and queers are gonna protest, but to no avail because nobody cares about fudge packers.
I love it, but.... I mean, certainly a step in the right direction, but....
The 'nuclear family' concept was the Cabal's first step towards demolition of real families. They brought it in as a stepping stone to broken families, blended families, single-parent families, 'gay parent' families, all the way to where we are now ("family is a social construct")
Real families are the three-generational family. Grandparent, parents and children. A three-generational family is one in which the children have direct access to the wisdom and learnings of the past generations, via grandparents. And there is a type of love a grandchild can receive from a grandparent that is very different from the love they receive from a parent.
Children benefit most from both. Think about it.
A three-point set-up is a foundation for stability. Tripods have three legs. A circle is defined by three points. There is a reason Jesus had three main disciples, too.
A three-generational family is the real, most natural and most common form of family throughout history. In the modern era, the concept of 'nuclear family' promoted the idea that somehow, grandparents (old people) aren't that important or essential to human stability, or life. And that cut-off from the past, a family with just parents and children is enough.
As someone who grew up without having access to either set of grandparents (one set died before I was born, and one set lived on the other side of the world), I feel, more than ever, the loss of being cut-off emotionally from my past, and my roots.
Grandparents help children to understand their own parents. Children can learn about why mom and dad are they way they are, through knowing their grandparents. And, historically, in all societies, three or more generations would naturally live together in the same community, the same nest.
Modernization, immigration and industrialization impacted that heavily. Those three things are important, but even more important is us learning to re-establish the most organic, natural and beneficial structure of a real traditional family.
Three generations. It was tradition for a reason.
Just saying.
I completely understand your feelings at grieving the loss of someone you never got the blessing to meet. Both of my grandpas died before I turned 2. I see them in old movies holding me as a baby and it makes me smile and sad at the same time.
My grandmas were awesome though. Both so funny and genuinely caring (although they weren’t the baking cookies kind). My dad’s mom used to entertain us by telling us all the trouble he got into with his brother and sisters growing up. My mom’s mom had boxes of old photos that I loved growing through and hearing stories about the past. Enabled me to see into a different time and appreciate how easy I had it compared to what they lived through.
Yeah, let’s celebrate that!
I appreciate the sentiment, but boy is that an unflattering name. Traditional family month would've sounded much better. Still, much better than what it was!
you took the words right out of my mouth. see my comment above (below?)
Yeah, I totally agree. "Nuclear family" sounds like my parents are setting off geiger counters with their three heads and green skin.
Maybe he can go let the completely liberal Nashville news stations in on it...They will NEVER advertise that!
But why do we care what they think 🤦