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The dot com is not mine

While I was homeless with my two adult sons, my son came up with the phrase "raising future adults" while we were talking one day. Shortly thereafter, I started my third attempt at a parenting blog using that phrase as the title.

I self posted The Hand Licking Incident to HN January 7, 2019 (nearly 7 years ago) and it did well, 641 points, 348 comments.

It made me ZERO dollars and ZERO cents. No one left any tips nor joined my Patreon.

Shortly thereafter, multiple articles using the phrase "raising future adults" popped up on the Internet. Some butthead happy to line his pockets by stealing phrasing, branding and market position from a dirt poor woman now has the .com site.

So people are lining someone's pockets for advice on how to raise ethical, decent people when they are unacquainted with the concept of ethics themselves.

Methinks you are getting swindled. But it's your money to piss away as you see fit and build the kind of cesspit you prefer living in. I guess.

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The Hand Licking Incident

When my oldest son was seven and in second grade, we were living in Kansas. Some time after the school year started, he began licking his hands. He soon was doing so all day, every day. His teacher wanted it to stop. So did his dad, my husband. I was a young homemaker, financially dependent on my husband, and I was feeling enormously pressured by both of these people. I also felt they both had real careers and didn't genuinely respect me. They both felt it was my job and mine alone to somehow make my son stop licking his hands entirely. I caved to the pressure. I tried telling my child to stop. I tried spanking him. I tried putting unpleasant spices on his hands to deter him. I tried grilling him about why he was doing this so I could find some solution. He couldn't explain it and the terror in his eyes was disturbing. None of it made any difference whatsoever. He continued to lick his hands all day, every day. He just tried to hide it a little better. Meanwhile, our rela...

Crazy Conclusions in Early Childhood

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The Chaos AKA English is Tough Stuff

I recently tripped across this clip of I love Lucy  where Ricky reads a children's book and keeps running into different pronunciations of ough . It reminds me of the much longer poem called The Chaos which sometimes gets called English is Tough Stuff. Wikipedia describes it as a poem demonstrating the irregularity of English spelling and pronunciation . Ricky goes on a rant about in Spanish, the same letters are always pronounced the same way. I have read that they don't have spelling bees in Spanish. That's a peculiarity of English education because of the extreme irregularity of English spelling and pronunciation. àMy ex-husband and oldest son are both not very social and they read a LOT. They both are prone to quirky interpretations of the pronunciation of words they learned from reading. As much as possible, I tried to make learning fun while homeschooling my kids. We spent a week on The Chaos while they objected to my pronunciation and looked it up only to find I w...