Fatherhood anonymous; an open discussion on being a dad.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
MagnificentUnicorn
Sitting in the yard while occasionally getting up to check on your infant is normal. Relying on a baby monitor further removes people from what is a really important part of bonding and the sacrifice of being a parent. We were given baby monitors when my first daughter was born, we regifted them and never used them.
It’s just my opinion and I could be entirely wrong, I think technology(baby monitors included)is a big part of what’s wrong with society today and dehumanizes us. Yes, I’m very aware that I’m typing this on a smartphone.
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Technology doesn’t do that. Technology is entirely neutral, and as much as it can take away from the human experience, it can also add to and enhance it. In this circumstance, there is literally no difference between sitting on my cell phone a few rooms away or interacting with humans across the street, except with one you’re actually building human connections and with the other you aren’t. In either circumstance you know what’s going on with your child and are able to provide a reasonable standard of care that will allow them to grow up to be happy and successful.
For discussion: I never got a buzz on if I was solely responsible for childcare, and I still won’t even though my youngest is 12. I’ve seen plenty of parents who are totally ok with tossing more than a few back, though, after they go to bed. I don’t direct harsh judgment their way because I’m not insane and that isn’t productive anyways. But between that and the situation described above, they aren’t even in the same universe in my mind.
Fatherhood anonymous; an open discussion on being a dad.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
skiJ
I still love this thread -
I love reading of the joy new Dads find in fatherhood - Thank you.
my reaction was to a specific scenario :
leaving a baby home alone so one could go to a 'block party' three houses away ( with the belief that either being able to see the front door, or a 'smart phone-linked monitor' was responsible parenting - leaving the baby alone. )
no. and still no.
my "value judgement" does not extend to any of the other scenarios that seek to minimize the decision in the scenario I commented to.
Those who believe it is acceptable to leave a baby home alone to go to a party. . .
we can part ways right here.
The baby monitors I gave ( 'first and second generation monitors to first-time parents' ) were so they could listen to their babies from other rooms in the house than the baby's room.
it was not so that they could be doing other things, or ,,, other things.
it was so they could listen to their baby from other rooms in the house.
Mustonen, back to stalking me "eh? "
how about you go 'jump in the lake' (?) ( it's not really a question, though it could be a rhetorical question -
there is plenty of room for improvement in your writing, or just letting it be. )
it saddens me that you have to frame the defense as an accusation of fear. But we are at least half a generation apart and your belief in technology ,,, is acknowledged.
I have also worked on my 'style' as I am aware in at least one form of dyslexia, parentheses are meaningless ; as for your claim that my writing is "lazy" - see above.
'go jump in the lake'
I still love this thread, and perhaps
I give the pages of these forums too much credit, and perhaps
this community is more important to me than it should be.
having witnessed the wreckage of SIDS, and having been touched by death in childhood,
those are wounds I live with.
I still love this thread.
good luck. and Thank you.
skiJ
Fortunately, I guess, it isn’t neglect, abuse, or child endangerment just because you say it is.
And nobody is stalking you, skiJ. I’m on the fence re: whether or not improving the clarity of your posts is actually a good thing, given how fucking sanctimonious you are. An impenetrable scramble of punctuation and spacing that most scroll past is likely best. I’m sure I’ll jump in the lake at some point soon here, question or not a question or whatever the hell you were after.
Fatherhood anonymous; an open discussion on being a dad.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
MagnificentUnicorn
You really haven’t been paying attention if that’s the dumbest thing that you’ve read on TGR. By all means encourage people to buy more stupid gadgets to “enhance” parenting. It’s all garbage and the fact that you’re arguing about that says something
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Feel free to show me where I encouraged parents to buy stupid gadgets. You douches were ragging on someone for doing something perfectly common so I called you out on that shit.
Worth noting that I never even said I personally did this (maybe once or twice, I really don’t remember). My wife and I would usually just take turns but I have plenty of friends who did and I thought it was fine.
Fatherhood anonymous; an open discussion on being a dad.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
skinipenem
Never really bit on this thread much, but unless your baby monitor has willy wonka's smell-a- vision then leaving the baby alone in the house seems like a really bad idea. [emoji91]
The monitors we have had relay a limited amount of data... small sight radius, temperature, and poor sound quality.
Just sayin...
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You don’t have fire/smoke detectors in your house?? Our cheapo surveillance cameras will detect a fire alarm going off and send alerts to my phone. Even an old analog baby monitor will transmit a fire alarm sound pretty obviously, though.
Fatherhood anonymous; an open discussion on being a dad.
Woof, salty folks are salty.
I’m not sure people buy monitors to abandon their kids; and frankly, it is quite the opposite. We buy monitors to be even more cautious with our littles.
Regarding monitors: it revolves around knowing your kid. Right now little E has pretty predictable naps and bedtime windows. Her crib is safe and devoid of SIDS risks.
We use a goggle nest camera that we can pull up on our phones and google docking stations. Great audio/image clarity (even in the dark).
Longest I’ve left the house is to run and get the mail; but I frequently will pull up the google app and let it run while I wrench on bikes or tune skis.
If I was buddies with my neighbor, I could easily see going over there for a beer while the google app was pulled up on my phone. There isn’t any difference between tuning in my ski shop vs walking next door to see my neighbor. My home is entirely automated via nest and alerts of smoke and CO go to my phone.
This is ever changing though; if one day E learns to escape her crib then I’m sure we will adjust.
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