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@SportsGaming-ll3ru17 күн бұрын
Your parenting style can shape how your kids acts in the future, take care of your kid, don’t be too harsh or too loose with them, talk to them when they mess up and help them learn from mistakes, don’t beat them for your mistakes
@Obedthian-UK12 күн бұрын
Intersting
@Tod_x11 күн бұрын
Children birth order also does
@real_meme_amogus3 күн бұрын
I would disagree, rarely, spanking should be done when kids mess up really, REALLY bad
@SportsGaming-ll3ru2 күн бұрын
@@real_meme_amogus spanking just doesn’t teach anything except to fear your parent
@Cactusgamer303Күн бұрын
More to respect them @@SportsGaming-ll3ru
@wyvern941915 күн бұрын
the authoritative parenting explanation honestly made me have a lot more appreciation for my parents
@donaldthecriminal6 күн бұрын
or youd be angry that they didnt parent you that way
@wyvern94196 күн бұрын
@@donaldthecriminal piss off cuz they did
@Luwis133716 күн бұрын
About Free-Range Parenting: I personaly think there are two types of this Parenting. First is trusting their children while the other is leaving the children by their own when possible. Both my parents been like this, yet in a different way. My father trusted my brother to do things, he trusted my brother with money to buy groceries and cook food, trusted him in school grades and his activities while my mother legt me with my activities, left me with money to buy groceries and left me at school with my grades. My father trusted my brother to go to school with a young age while my mother left me to go alone to school at a young age. When my brother had a big flesh wound my father trusted him to take care of the wound correctly, while my mother left me to take care the wound correctly. Both resulted into the same thing that has been explained in the video. We learned solutions and life by living and ended up VERY independed from anyone except ourself, managing to do everything on our own while asking for help when its desperatly needed and not as a first or second option. We both learned multiple different social skills and to fit in a large group of different kinds of people. Only 2 difference there are is that one was more social and though but also more strict while the other was more independed and risky but also more free to the world in all directions, also the negative ones.
@murplesauce12 күн бұрын
Sounds like the parenting in Matilda. What kind of parenting did it instill in you and your brother?
@IsabelaisCRINGE6 күн бұрын
Nice!
@mesmo_n10 күн бұрын
my family was all an insane combination of tiger parenting and helicopter parenting. dear god did it fuck me up
@AnyEnglishWord11 сағат бұрын
I agree. Although lately I’ve been more free range parented
@Stuffy_unfluffy11 күн бұрын
Mom: authoritative Dad: *pull that the force of 1,000 drill sergeants*
@WidowMaryPrescot5 күн бұрын
Me but opposite
@ermwhagthmesigma12 күн бұрын
I grew up with free range parents, I have vivid memory’s of walking half a mile with my sister to our 7/11. And walking home, or walking to the park. They really didn’t care what I did, as long as I was safe.
@mandrakeblake-tw1uv17 күн бұрын
Request : Every Great Fire Explained -Great Fire of Rome -Temple of Diana -Library of Alexandria -Great Fire of London -Great Fire of Chicago -Great Fire of Boston -Triangle Factory -Reichstag -Luna Park -Brazil's National Museum -Australia's 2019 Bushfire Season -Notre Dame -Kyoto Animations -California Fire Season ( 2020 )
@BES_Official_17 күн бұрын
@@mandrakeblake-tw1uv oh, you like fires?name every fire then.
@Flintgamingandmemes17 күн бұрын
Kyoto animations?
@BES_Official_17 күн бұрын
@@Flintgamingandmemes yup
@Ilikenuggies216 күн бұрын
mr @mandrakeblake-tw1uv why do u like fires
@mandrakeblake-tw1uv16 күн бұрын
@@Ilikenuggies2 Well : 1.I do this request because I think fires aren't talked about too much. 2.I was a pyromaniac kid which burned stuff ( not live animals, thank the Lord ) like paper, dead insects, leaves, wood, etc, etc. 3.Also, fires are quite sad and symbolical to begin with. I grew up during the 2010's and I remember the embers of the Museum, the catastrophe at Notre Dame, the arson at KyoAni, the hellscape of Australia, California, Canada and Brazil's Amazon, and various other fires. Bringing awareness could prevent people from doing more harm than good.
@Altercounter13 күн бұрын
Helicopter parenting explanation so good that it made me realize It's the style that my parents did lol. **Laughs in dependence.**
@murplesauce12 күн бұрын
I always thought helicopter parenting spawned from the sensationalism of the news talking all about the kidnappings and murders of the 80s.
@IsabelaisCRINGE6 күн бұрын
Unfortunately, me too
@FactTube_x16 күн бұрын
«To Those Who Wants To Know Them All» 1)Survival First Parenting 00:00 2)Authoritarian Parenting 01:20 3)Rational And Nurturing Parenting 02:20 4)Moralistic And Rigid Parenting 03:34 5)Scientific Parenting 05:00 6)Permissive Parenting 06:19 7)Helicopter Parenting 07:46 8)Authoritative Parenting 09:34 9)Snow Plough Parenting 11:12 10)Tiger Parenting 12:17 11)Free Range Parenting 13:21 12)Attachment Parenting 14:40 I Hope You Found This Helpful! Love All Parents&Kids ♡♡♡
@IsabelaisCRINGE6 күн бұрын
Thanks
@I_LikeAir313 күн бұрын
Imagine this guy’s search history “When did good parenting start?” Google: 👁️ 👁️ 👄
@rachael.icloudd13 сағат бұрын
Ong 😹😹
@SC4RL3TTBL00M_P1N17 күн бұрын
“Thank you evaluator” we all say in unison
@Lana_nail_tech17 күн бұрын
THANK YOU EVALUATOR! (BFDI pfp!)
@judgemanamacarsanar362617 күн бұрын
THANK YOU EVALUATOR! (BFDI pfp!)
@ChineduOpara17 күн бұрын
THANK YOU EVALUATOR!
@Urrfavv.brittany17 күн бұрын
THANK YOU EVALUATOR (Nice pfp)
@leamcclain164817 күн бұрын
THANK YOU EVALUATOR!
@edd218416 күн бұрын
I always liked my parents style it was my dad explained it to me as I got older. "I'm raising you to be an independent and well-thought-out man. That does not mean that you do not have to support and love at home or you can't ask for my assistance. But I am not one to tolerate the 🐂💩, put your best effort forward in everything you do. So you have no regrets. You can't be upset if you put in 100% and it didn't work out. You only fail when you don't try"
@Moontrail_WC16 күн бұрын
12:48 Bro broke character 💀
@Just_some_w3irdo4 күн бұрын
Wdym
@Porge284 күн бұрын
0:09 Bro thinks dinosaurs were still alive when humans existed💀💀💀
@PixelDop4 күн бұрын
Joķes
@GnomelotteКүн бұрын
Well, they kinda are, but we call them birds. 😀 But yeah, not dinosaurs like that.
@Cactusgamer303Күн бұрын
Crocs and Gators
@GnomelotteКүн бұрын
@@Cactusgamer303 Crocs and gators aren't dinosaurs, nor are they directly related to dinosaurs.
@Ruth-fz6ti16 күн бұрын
Having Tigers parents is like a mix of being the best and being the worst because on the other hand you want the best to see and feel your Parents love but on the other hand the you are so fed up of Expectation and pressure and just want to be yourself with no Judgement dang i type to much
@MmmImAPotato9 күн бұрын
Ye, and sometimes there also comes fear of failure, where you're scared of literally what helps you learn, which is clearly not good, I have parents that always expect the best from me, and if I don't reach their expectations, they try to guilt trip me with "Don't you wanna be the the greatest? I thought you were more ambitious, in life you can only live well if you step on the others and reach the top" which isn't true, remember to always appreciate yourself as you are, even if you're on second place or lower, as long as you are proud of yourself you're completly fine🫶
@PNKELEPHANTSONPARADE16 күн бұрын
Authoritative parenting is also called gentle parenting. A lot of people think gentle parenting is submissive but it is not.
@Hanzu_Yuzuru13 күн бұрын
How?
@thedreaded12 күн бұрын
@Hanzu_Yuzuru Think about to like this: You're didn't do his chores. You then explain to him why not doing his chores can hurt him, then u punish him.
@thedreaded12 күн бұрын
@Hanzu_Yuzuru *son
@COVID-19_Crab2 күн бұрын
@@thedreadedYou're thinking of authoritarian parenting.
@ab325562 күн бұрын
@@COVID-19_CrabWe’re talking about authoritarian rn
@CakeDog7116 күн бұрын
0:09 Damn didn't know cavemen got dinosaurs and wooly mamoths to deal with😂
@Kanuhandle091411 күн бұрын
Permissive parenting in the 1960s made boomers who “don’t have boundaries” and “didn’t learn actions have consequences”. If that doesn’t explain my in laws idk what does.
@jessicahannah25222 күн бұрын
Bull hockey. I am a child of the 50s/60s, and we had high expectations. The expectation was conformity, respect for authority, and such. We are talking parent/child relationships, not the young adult/college kids that were out protesting and burning bras.That was a different group of people than parent/child of that era. We would drive through Berkeley, CA (I grew up in that region) and gawk at the "hippies" while my uber conservative, white collar dad would make derisive comments about long hair and dirty people, not defending their country, etc. We had a LOT of boundaries in our schooling, families, relationships, and we absolutely understood consequences of our actions. In the era of no birth control access or abortions, women stayed virgins (if not virginal lol) because every young woman understood how pregnancy happens, and there were NO social service programs for unwed mothers. It was very, deeply shaming in that era to even be divorced! That permissive, free range, no consequences stuff came in the 70s. In the 70s all the women wanted freedom, birth control/abortion was available, women were able to work more because they were FINALLY allowed to have their own bank accounts and credit cards, and sought divorces when not financially tied to a man by law. They were busy exploring themselves,multiple relationships, therapy and 'mothers little helper' and the kids were afterthoughts who were raising themselves or each other. Cher in "Mermaids" encompasses this pretty well. I just love people who generalize an entire generation when they weren't even born and have zero knowledge of anything at all about what it was like. It was not an easy era by anyone's stretch of the imagination, but we most assuredly understood consequences, and boundaries. Because it wasn't just at home, it was in church, school, work, relationships...everything. EVERYTHING.
@Kanuhandle09142 күн бұрын
@@jessicahannah2522 yes…we are expected to respect our elders no matter how poorly sad elder treats us or how we are. That is exactly what my entitled boundary-less in laws say too.
@bags-px7kv17 күн бұрын
That's nice! I wanna learn parenting styles so I can learn how badly or goodly my parents treat me! :D
@The_Deer4187 күн бұрын
0:19 Gacha baby
@Dibbydibble9 күн бұрын
Helicopter parenting: When I was growing up and even now I knew so many people with helicopter parents I would always get pissed because they would not be able to hang out without constantly being watched over it was so annoying and now that I’m older my closest friend has parents like this and as mentioned in the video she struggles a lot A LOT with independence like she’s so clueless and scared on her own and any minor inconvenience she’ll start whining and acting like a little kid.
@SlidrrEAidk11 күн бұрын
The analogies are crazy 💀
@AkariX928217 күн бұрын
6:50 not The Evaluator rhyming 😂❤
@ChineduOpara17 күн бұрын
I'd say most parents have a mix of 2-3 styles.
@BFRL12 күн бұрын
Extra style: Abusive Parenting. You know how a lot of us are victims of a bully at school? This is exactly abusive parenting, but 10 times worse. They are basically Nero Claudius Cesar but if you were his child. All the rules are over the top, and if you get a single small thing wrong, they will transform into the devil. This heavily affects the child and either makes them abusive, or depressed. Therefore, this is the worst parenting style and should not have existed.
@jessicahannah25222 күн бұрын
The worst parenting style is apathy.
@randomplayer4692 күн бұрын
That’s not a parenting style that was abuse
@inanutshell263712 күн бұрын
What type is my mom? My mom relied on attachment, rationality and nourishment, a pinch of strictness and a lot of authoritative parenting. She had some high expectations but never stressed me out
@murplesauce12 күн бұрын
Sounds like she was a good one! Parents pull from multiple parenting styles
@COVID-19_Crab2 күн бұрын
Tiger parenting
@mia-vq9xj17 күн бұрын
3:18 THE BOGGIE MANS GONNA EAT THEM 💀💀💀
@Cyrusthewierdkid12 күн бұрын
AM I NEXT?! I DONT WANNA BE NEXT AHHHHHHHHH
@AbbeyYard11 күн бұрын
@@Cyrusthewierdkid BOOOOUUUUGGHH
@Cyrusthewierdkid11 күн бұрын
@@AbbeyYard NOOOOOOOOOO
@SourCube-ko4ls13 күн бұрын
My parents guilt trip me at every chance they can get
@COVID-19_Crab2 күн бұрын
Authoritarian
@orestisvas727711 күн бұрын
Just so you know, knights in full plate armour are surprisingly fast and mobile, there are videos about it on KZbin
@Edanodon117 күн бұрын
Urm dinosaurs didn’t exist when humans were around they were in the ground
@KaijuGameplayTv659217 күн бұрын
he is dumb
@_mxbird16 күн бұрын
technically dinosaurs still do exist! but i think the inclusion of non-avian dinosaurs was more for dramatic effect
@Edanodon116 күн бұрын
@@_mxbird ya it’s prob to emphasise how much they needed to protect themselves
@Lidcats13 күн бұрын
@@Edanodon1and also because dinosaurs are pretty cool
@frostayowo204817 күн бұрын
Wake up baes the evaluator just posted
@PurpleStarz.17 күн бұрын
I’m awakee
@Cryxstalzz17 күн бұрын
It funnier cause i actually just woke up😭
@TNDandTMD8 күн бұрын
Everyone who says their parents are authoritarian have the opposite
@Mothxcat12 күн бұрын
My mom is a mix of helicopter attachment and free range parenting
@ARANDOMTVGUYZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ12 күн бұрын
0:16 dinosaurs time doesnt intersect with humans time
@Abb-overseer10 күн бұрын
It’s a joke Mr.buzzkill
@ARANDOMTVGUYZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ10 күн бұрын
@@Abb-overseer im autistic, i dont get jokes, "Mr.buzzkill"
@Abb-overseer10 күн бұрын
@@ARANDOMTVGUYZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ sorry I didn’t know
@Pecha1nt10 күн бұрын
@@ARANDOMTVGUYZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ So am I That's no excuse to not get the funny
@invurret95333 күн бұрын
@@Abb-overseerIt's misleading.
@Oscar-yy8gp11 күн бұрын
After careful examination my parents are diagnosed with caveman syndrome ( I translated to English from ooga booga language)
@IsabelaisCRINGE6 күн бұрын
That's great, tell them ooga ooga ooga
@cosmin47986 күн бұрын
0:10 dinosaurs have been extinct long before humans spawned in
@Choppytehbear133717 күн бұрын
1:51 Knights could sprint in full plate armor.
@lukeeditz128 күн бұрын
🤓
@sleyking123Күн бұрын
@@lukeeditz12 what's wrong with him sharing information?
@WillstillplayzofficialYT3 күн бұрын
The latest parenting strategy: giving them an iPad and letting them go on the hub.
@daniel.sandberg.529816 күн бұрын
If my dad say no, it is a definite no
@tjcaruthers559315 күн бұрын
My moment in parenting that got to me was the moment my daughter asked why after i told her no about something. It wasnt necessarily the question but more of the response of because i said so that escaped my mouth that upset me the most.
@UTTPsucks99616 күн бұрын
0:09 Humans appeared and evolved during the Cenozoic, there were NO dinosaurs.
@angiejones96815 күн бұрын
My mom was Survival first parenting.
@murplesauce12 күн бұрын
It definitely still exists. I think it is prevalent in single parent households or when both parents are exhausted from trying to make a living
@lunix43516 күн бұрын
I'm addicted to these videos
@Roxxi-Edits12 күн бұрын
RESPECT MY AUTHOROTAH
@Lana_nail_tech17 күн бұрын
chat the evaluator just posted wake tf up
@Chirp-ballad3 сағат бұрын
0:00 survival first parenting 1:24 Authoritarian 2:20 Rational and nurturing Parenting 3:36 moralistic and rigid 5:01 Scientific 6:21 permissive 7:49 helicopter parenting 9:35 Authoritative 11:14 Snow Plough 12:18 Tiger parenting 13:24 Free range 14:43 attachment
@KittyCatSoups9 күн бұрын
Free range parenting would have never happened with me. Not because I grew up with strict parents, but because I grew up on the most dangerous road in the county.
@I_LikeAir313 күн бұрын
I want to be a mix of authoritative and free range
@Ball2452312 күн бұрын
My old sister is not a parent but the way how she take care of me when mom is not home is exactly like the authoritative parenting
@humeraamin73214 күн бұрын
Bribing? Those kids are lucky
@Spinosaurus_06 күн бұрын
0:13 dinosaurs never lived with humans
@AkshashMunshi12 күн бұрын
Dinos… they… went extinct way before humans
@TheHarlymShowanimations15 күн бұрын
this the kind of stuff we need in school
@mishmashmixofstuff17 күн бұрын
The dark ages reference was very Eurocentric. That same time period saw huge advancements in science and mathematics, but they were in the Islamic world instead of in Europe during the Islamic golden age. A lot of east Asia's greatest empires came to be during that time period as well.
@km-hi9or16 күн бұрын
There were advancements in Europe too. Dark ages reffers to early middle ages.
@ColonelCandurs16 күн бұрын
That only happed because they conqued whites
@Tomodrone12 күн бұрын
Heck even in Europe, depending on where you lived, especially with many ancient democracies like Frisian Freedom and monevasia from the Middle ages were practically unaffected by the dark ages and still maintained scientific advancements as well as trade routes, so it honestly really depend on where you were on the European constant
@murplesauce12 күн бұрын
I found it interesting how time period were applied in the beginning but by the end it was just different styles. The periodic examples still exist today to the point that the styles just sounded repetitive
@AtlasArtAnimation6 күн бұрын
It’s interesting how the environment molds the majority parenting style of that time… for better and for worse
@couldntfindahandleohmygod10 күн бұрын
my mum does a really nice combination of attachment, free range and authoritarian parenting. love it
@HandyK902_Күн бұрын
My ocs are The mixes of 🤑🤑 -Snow plough (But stills disciplines their kids to act on their own without them) -Authoritative -Helicopter -Free range (Still Checks on their safety) -Attachment (Istg The mother babys Them all so much 💀💀🙏🏻🙏🏻)
@THERATKING1288 күн бұрын
My dad is authoritative. If my dad would let her, my mom would be turned into an actual helicopter now.
@Justanormalperson-w5m3 күн бұрын
If it wasnt for dr.benjamin spock then the world wouldben been stricter like in the old days
@towaxien6026Күн бұрын
Im envious of Free-range and authorative.
@irishkitchen165111 күн бұрын
my parents switch parenting styles like a rostiree chicken in a microwave and every part is a parenting style
@Zanawalker-d3m17 күн бұрын
i actually love these videos
@joshinglyyy4 күн бұрын
free-range parenting is the best in my opinion
@Auroramyth13 сағат бұрын
Um dinosaurs? 😂😂 dinosaurs lived far before the era of humans and other mammals.
@ashley-2500Күн бұрын
Bro is so created to say its more involved then yeast in bred just insane w man
@thedarkstar704517 күн бұрын
All of these have their benefits and downsides, but I find the best kids come from authoritative parents, while the worst come from permissive and snow plow parents. But when it comes to survivability and protection, free range parents dropped the ball. In the 90s, it seemed like every 3 minutes a kid would get kidnapped or worse due to their parents not protecting them enough. When it comes to children, due to the amount of evil people in the world (you know the ones I'm talking about), letting them learn the hard way without being in proximity to them could end up getting them kidnapped and killed. So in my honest opinion, free range parents are the worst parents for a child to have. Most parents that ive ssen like this were just too lazy to watch over their children wnd spend time with them; forcing them to grow up feeling neglected, looking for that parental affection elsewhere from people that want to harm them, and often leading to them going missing, getting kidnapped and killed, or worse. Authoritative parents are usually a mix of all the other styles, but with logic wnd reasoning that doesn't deny their kids boundaries nor disrespects the parents rules, so this is the way to go in my opinion.
@johnyliltoe16 күн бұрын
Keep in mind that abductions and dangers in the 90s were severely overblown in the media. Much like the idea of poisoned candy at Halloween, a couple of cases can be overblown by the news to seem like an epidemic. Paranoid parents pass on that paranoia to other parents and everyone just assumes it's true. Kidnappings haven't gotten that much better since the 90s and kidnappings by strangers have always been incredibly rare (as a percentage). The vast majority are done by family members or close relatives; the people the child is supposed to be able to trust. That said, if you don't at least have your kid check in from time to time there are bigger dangers than people. If they seriously injure themselves while playing in the woods it could be the difference between life and death if you expect them to contact you or not. The biggest danger to a kid is always going to be themselves.
@murplesauce12 күн бұрын
You say the 90s, but since I had helicopter parents in the 90s, I associate the freerange parenting with genx. It wasn't all about being lazy either, it was a time when both parents working outside of the home became particularly common. Idk if the evil in the world picked up more during that period or if the sensationalism of the 24 hour news cycle made it seem that way.
@thedarkstar704511 күн бұрын
@@murplesauce Interesting... Thanks for sharing your perspective!
@boiler_alert3 күн бұрын
"and kids actually have potential"
@radeonpernicekКүн бұрын
Just a little note: Dinosaurs and Humans have never lived in the same era
@arai_thegirlinatrance17 күн бұрын
Love these videos!
@Markplaysgames.3 күн бұрын
Do people genuinely believe that dinosaurs were alive when humans first started showing up?(excluding birds)
@burner5552 күн бұрын
Some creationists do actually believe that
@GnomelotteКүн бұрын
Outside as a kid on our own: Pretty much free range. Outside as a kid with our parents/ Inside the home: You do as we say/ Because I said so ! (Spanking included)
@DumbTheDubleU10 күн бұрын
15:40 that’s the biggest lie I’ve heard all day
@codename_nons11412 күн бұрын
very... interesting script writing
@NemoTheAngryFish5 күн бұрын
Woah this guy really grew quickly
@jessicahannah25222 күн бұрын
As a child raised in the 1950'/60's, none of what was said was true. For anyone in our huge, massive, extensive family, or anyone we knew. We were given free rein to roam, explore, create. We were expected to respect authority i.e. parents, teachers, other adults--but this was taught from the cradle, and not authoritatively. You just learned that calling women "Ma'am" or "Mrs Smith" was how it was done...by everyone. Polite. Respectful. If we were punished, we were told exactly why: "You failed three classes, kiddo so you're getting a Mohawk (that was very common report card punishment and probably why it became a style for those so-called rebels) so everyone can see your grades didn't pass." "You can't clean your room? Dang, that means you're grounded for the next 30 days, and now we have to put up with each other ALL THE TIME. This isn't easy on me either kiddo. Trust me, it isn't." The most common punishment I rec'd was being forced to iron clothing. Wrinkle-free clothing wasn't a thing in the 60's and ironing was a serious chore. My dad was white collar so there were always a LOT of dress shirts and handkerchiefs; my mom was a nurse so all her work clothes were starched and both had to be p.e.r.f.e.c.t. We also didn't have the irons we have now. Clothes were sprinkled with water and rolled up to keep the moisture in. You had to get into every nook and crease and iron in those pleats perfectly. Nothing less than perfect was acceptable. We all did chores, daily and more on weekends, so those weren't punishment. I was doing chores at three years old (putting away laundry, feeding the pets, watering plants, etc.) We were much more communal in family life back then. Everyone appeared at the breakfast and dinner table and expected to do their part, whether in preparing, conversing, table manners, clearin up. And you had manners or else. It was very clear what the expectations were, and you respected them and obeyed them, period. School was harder, because conformity was beyond expected. Waver even slightly and consequences were still being spanked in the office, or serious detention. Being ostracized could happen too. I got caught smoking two puffs of a stolen cigarette three miles from school by a passing teacher; the result was a researched essay of 1000 words (sigh) why smoking is bad FOR KIDS (1960s wasn't doing all the warnings of things), two weeks of detention, told my parents and I got grounded, extra chores like weeding, scrubbing walls (which were clean btw) and so on. It wasn't anything like what you described, and never knew anyone in my family or school or life who had a life like you described. We had over 100 family members! Aunts, uncles, cousins, in laws---my mom had 13 siblings and my dad had 9. There were seven of us siblings. HUGE family lol, and we weren't Catholic or rural or uneducated. Lack of birth control or abortions back in the day made huge families. I remember an uncle/aunt were discovered to be using condoms somehow (after 8 children) and it was a family SCANDAL. Grandma had vapors AND pearl clutching lol. I've no idea how that fact was discovered lol...I just remember the hush-hush talk of how bad it was, how dare they, where did they get them, are they too good for us, they need to listen to God and be blessed with more children, and such. I had no idea what a condom was but I relished the scandal of this particular aunt/uncle lol. Anyway, your interpretation of families of the era I was raised in is ridiculous. Thus, the others are just as suspect.
@jonnaas3 күн бұрын
3:48 i got butterfly stomach when i heard that
@JJDST12317 күн бұрын
I love your content!!!!
@KnifeEaredPeopleHater2 күн бұрын
Knights in full plate armor are NOT that slow.
@GnomelotteКүн бұрын
The only dinosaurs who were alive during the times of prehistoric humans were the same type as are alive today, called birds.
@Mhurren_DND12 күн бұрын
Me over here: I must have tiger parents! Them: over strict Me: op, never mind I am the tiger
@aayanscreativelab178613 күн бұрын
Noted. Take the pros of the good ones, remove the cons, uh huh, uh huh,
@Nobody_cares_anymore-ui3is9 күн бұрын
Mom: there but not really. Cared for me yes but also was strikt and easy to anger. Dad: absent. Gave me up many times and almost killed me 3 different times. I have trauma 😀👍✨✨✨
@Wonlorie12 күн бұрын
Random tips for parenting style: Teach your kids from birth.
@skywiffavery8 күн бұрын
I’ve got one helicopter parent and one tiger parent and oh boy is it sooo annoying. I’m also a only child so on top of that I’m never left alone
@SanityInAnAmazonBox13 күн бұрын
I cannot imagine, counting the amount of similes and metaphors in this video
@Phobic_Nova12 күн бұрын
ah yes, dinosaurs lived through the k-pg extinction event...
@daishanoel32438 күн бұрын
So cersi has a snow ploughing parenting for joffery lannister .
@sisterplanettv4 күн бұрын
ykw ima let my kids stay up late, then not allow them to sleep until the next night at bedtime
@JesseMcLeod-hu3fh9 күн бұрын
0:12 um actually dinosaurs went extinct before we came on to the scene
@Inyourwalls673 күн бұрын
I have a friend with tiger parents and her favorite animal is a tiger lolll
@thegamebois64604 күн бұрын
My father was raised in a helicopter parents style, I did not know if had a name, and was very popular, thanks for the info.
@dfw_3buks17 күн бұрын
Snow plough parenting= LeBron James and bronny James
@ThePickyPalate9 күн бұрын
My mother is a tiger mum 😂 exactly the same. No A’s that means I get canned/ whip with a belt.
@jaxonmoreau29465 күн бұрын
The ones that are more nice seem to work more
@GiảiThíchDễHiểu11 күн бұрын
tks bro, very helpful video
@whoistoft4 күн бұрын
dawg isn’t this the mainly facts guy
@SunnyLeapGT12 күн бұрын
13:31 Average floridian parenting:
@Mikey.IsMyPFP15 күн бұрын
Mine was the Rational and Nurturing Parenting. (if I was an adult I would do it.)
@ElizaH-c6x14 күн бұрын
Me getting PTSD with my dads house during the tiger parents
@RyineVal-pj7so17 күн бұрын
But there wasn’t dinosaurs at the same time as humans