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  1. #1
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    well, with my own observation everytime I send my son to school. Parents are very caring and sweet with their children. which is good and it can be bad aswell. they speak to them very calmly and in soft voice.
    i've seen some kids shouting with their parents, throwing their school bag at them, etc. then the parent will just ignore her/him or won't even get mad. they will treat them the same way as they treat them when they are doing good. so kids think being good/bad is the same thing. with us Filipinos this is a 'BIG NO'. a child can't shout at us or throw things. or else he/she will be in 'BIG TROUBLE'. this is how a child build respect to their parents and elders. once you showed them that they can't do everything they want and that your word is more powerful than theirs then they learn how to respect.
    i've seen kids in PI that are smoking and drinking at the young age aswell... so wether here or PI, it depends on the upbringing of the parents. It's just more obvious here coz kids here are not afraid with their parents while in PI they do vices secretly. also kids in PI can't say 'NO' with their parents. they have to do whatever we ask them to do without asking questions.
    and children here are becoming more independent at young age. while in PI we are very clingy with our parents or family. 18yrs. old for us still young while here it's already adult.
    sometimes when my son answers me 'yes' seems like there's something missing... he used to say 'opo' or 'po', but answering 'yes' now makes it lil' bit disrespectful but that's the way it is.
    the thing with us Filipinos we baby our kids so much, meaning we don't really teach them how to be independent.

    how many British guys here still cuddle and kiss their Mum? or sits and lie down their head on their mum's lap?


  2. #2
    Administrator KeithD's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by adam&chryss View Post
    how many British guys here still cuddle and kiss their Mum? or sits and lie down their head on their mum's lap?
    That's disgusting
    Keith - Administrator


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    Respected Member maria_and_matt's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Win2Win View Post
    That's disgusting

    i cannot imagine you, with your head on you mums lap
    God grant me the serenity to accept the things i cannot change, the courage to change the things i can and the wisdom to hide the bodies of those people i had to kill because they pissed me off.


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    Respected Member lordna's Avatar
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    Interesting replies...thanks everyone!

    Beginning to wonder where i went wrong with my kids sometimes although i'm sure all parents must wonder if they are doing it right.

    About 8 years ago now my first wife died after a very long illness during which i was her carer. After her death itook the decision to stop work to care for their needs for the next 2 years after which i worked just part time. The kids were 15, 13 and 7 at the time and obviously the elder two were affected quite badly by the loss of their mother. I did everything i could for them and now on reflection, maybe too much as now i think they expect everything. When their mother was alive she did everything for them so naturally i decided to do the same as anyone else would in my circumstances.

    Now they are older (youngest is 15) i want my life back and am fortunate enough to have married a filipina and looking forward to our life together.

    My kids are OK but i do feel they are selfish , dont seem to have much respect and have no morals...none of the things i believe are important and have tried hard to teach them are important.


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    Quote Originally Posted by Win2Win View Post
    That's disgusting


    My husband is so close to his Mom and vice versa.
    Sometimes I feel he is mama's boy at 51.
    I asked him one day and he was very angry.
    But if he will admit, I will surely understand.
    I admit, I'm bit mama's girl and everytime I visit her, I used to lay down my head in her lap and fast asleep.
    My youngest brother, he couldn't sleep without touching my Nanay nipple before he sleep until he reached grade school. He's now in his 30's and very close to my Nanay.

    I have also a friend and co worker before. I invited her in our house and we sleep together.
    I was suddenly awoke because she was touching my nipple.
    I was angry asked her but she said she used to do that with her Mom even in her 20's.
    She is really a nice girl but not at night.


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    Moderator Arthur Little's Avatar
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    I sometimes wonder, if the root of the problem in western culture lies in the fact that so many women are trying [not always successfully] to balance a career with being mothers ... a practice increasingly encouraged, through incentives offered by the governments of the day, for women to return to work after say, 3 months' statutory maternity leave.

    Consequently, all too often, very young children spend much of their formative years in the care of 'childminders' ... resulting in their being deprived of the natural maternal contact that is so essential at such a crucial stage in their growth and development ... and frequently ending up in their becoming "latch-key" kids - left to fend for themselves - upon attaining school-age.

    Ultimately, by the time they reach their teens, these youngsters are, by virtue of the lack of proper attention they ought to be receiving at home, find themselves free to roam the streets seeking ... and indulging in ... all sorts of deviant pastimes to relieve their sheer boredom. It seems clear to me, that it's all part of a vicious circle!


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    good and bad

    In every culture there is good and bad, I admire the close relationship within families, the extended network of help and support that is more common in The Philippines than the U.K. However, most people here i have met have scars from being hit by something ( a belt or clothes hanger perhaps) by their mother or father This teaches them love and respect.... The children are passed from "sister" to "sister" no coherence Nothing is ever that simple. We have a dependency (or a reliance) on the state to provide. Here, there is only the family. We should both learn from each other, we should take their happiness in the face of REAL problems and they should take our?????? National Debt?
    Bless!


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    Quote Originally Posted by pennybarry View Post




    I have also a friend and co worker before. I invited her in our house and we sleep together.
    I was suddenly awoke because she was touching my nipple.
    I was angry asked her but she said she used to do that with her Mom even in her 20's.
    She is really a nice girl but not at night.
    I've been trying to keep abreast with this thread
    I have two "kids" now in their early 20's and although I'm divorced spent much time with them before they left home. I'm sure it's time spent with parents during the formative years that counts. I can't now control what my kids do with their lives, but I'm always here for them and because of that bonding in the early years they always keep in touch (but not the way Penny describes )


  9. #9
    Moderator Arthur Little's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by pennybarry View Post
    I was suddenly awoke because she was touching my nipple.
    Quote Originally Posted by jackson.alan46 View Post
    [SIZE="3"]I've been trying to keep abreast with this thread
    ... Nice one, Alan! Evidently, MY sense of humour is "rubbing-off" on YOU!


  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by jackson.alan46 View Post
    I've been trying to keep abreast with this thread
    I have two "kids" now in their early 20's and although I'm divorced spent much time with them before they left home. I'm sure it's time spent with parents during the formative years that counts. I can't now control what my kids do with their lives, but I'm always here for them and because of that bonding in the early years they always keep in touch (but not the way Penny describes )
    Quote Originally Posted by Arthur Little View Post
    ... Nice one, Alan! Evidently, MY sense of humour is "rubbing-off" on YOU!
    We call it mannerism Doc and Arth.
    Most children who used to have breast feeding from their Mom developed mannerism. I don't know but sometimes baby couldn't sleep without breasfeeding on the right breast whilst other hand of baby is at her mother's left breast. It is their habits sometimes and developed mannerism until they fell to sleep.

    They started to develop bad mannerism during their childhood.
    I have also friend who got her mannerism sucking her thumb until we reached high school. During our elementary early days, she was still carrying her feeding bottle. She stopped but, but developed sucking her thumb.


  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by pennybarry View Post
    I have also friend who got her mannerism sucking her thumb until we reached high school. During our elementary early days, she was still carrying her feeding bottle. She stopped but, but developed sucking her thumb.
    Men tend to find something to suck until the day they die....
    Keith - Administrator


  12. #12
    Moderator Arthur Little's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jackson.alan46 View Post
    I have two "kids" now in their early 20's and although I'm divorced spent much time with them before they left home. I'm sure it's time spent with parents during the formative years that counts. I can't now control what my kids do with their lives, but I'm always here for them and because of that bonding in the early years they always keep in touch (but not the way Penny describes )
    A very "touching" post! But ... entirely.


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    Trusted Member sars_notd_virus's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by adam&chryss View Post
    well, with my own observation everytime I send my son to school. Parents are very caring and sweet with their children. which is good and it can be bad aswell. they speak to them very calmly and in soft voice.
    i've seen some kids shouting with their parents, throwing their school bag at them, etc. then the parent will just ignore her/him or won't even get mad. they will treat them the same way as they treat them when they are doing good. so kids think being good/bad is the same thing. with us Filipinos this is a 'BIG NO'. a child can't shout at us or throw things. or else he/she will be in 'BIG TROUBLE'. this is how a child build respect to their parents and elders. once you showed them that they can't do everything they want and that your word is more powerful than theirs then they learn how to respect.
    i've seen kids in PI that are smoking and drinking at the young age aswell... so wether here or PI, it depends on the upbringing of the parents. It's just more obvious here coz kids here are not afraid with their parents while in PI they do vices secretly. also kids in PI can't say 'NO' with their parents. they have to do whatever we ask them to do without asking questions.
    and children here are becoming more independent at young age. while in PI we are very clingy with our parents or family. 18yrs. old for us still young while here it's already adult.
    sometimes when my son answers me 'yes' seems like there's something missing... he used to say 'opo' or 'po', but answering 'yes' now makes it lil' bit disrespectful but that's the way it is.
    the thing with us Filipinos we baby our kids so much, meaning we don't really teach them how to be independent.

    how many British guys here still cuddle and kiss their Mum? or sits and lie down their head on their mum's lap?
    I agree with you dear....
    faith and respect with my family (one of the reasons why my husband loves me so much!!)


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