• RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    Those books from the latter half of the 1900s about how to deal with kids just sucked. They all had various ways of trying to force kids who were any other shaped peg but round into a round hole while making the parent(s) feel justified and right about it.

    “How to make your child inconvenience you less and not diverge from societal conformity requirements”

    We still have similar books today, but those are bought by parents who refuse to acknowledge their kid is different and want conformity for who knows what reason…personal prejudice, religion, personal failure because of the aforementioned, etc.

  • Rcklsabndn@sh.itjust.works
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    11 hours ago

    My mom had something like, ‘How To Love A Troubled Child’ in her bedroom bookshelf.

    Always hoped it was for my sister.

    • slaneesh_is_right@lemmy.org
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      10 hours ago

      I once gifted my friend a book that was called: how to deal with difficult people. I saw it at some second hand bookshop and thought it would be funny, you know, because she has to deal with me. Ahe got super upset and kept telling me that she’s not difficult.

    • A_norny_mousse@feddit.org
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      9 hours ago

      “Modern Childbirth (1972 edition)”

      Interesting. I wonder what it deemed modern that would be deemed the sheer opposite today.

      I was born around that time, and I know that baby “formula” didn’t really exist back then, it was mostly milk powder and sugar. No healthy mommy milk for me.

  • smh@slrpnk.net
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    17 hours ago

    My mom had all sorts of books on mental health and disability. I remember one on abnormal childhood development (it had neat examples of pictures kids might draw) and multiple with now-outdated but then-clinical terms in their titles. These were textbooks from her attempt at an MS in social work in the 1980s. Didn’t keep the neighborhood kids from teasing me that they were my mom’s way of coping with having me.

  • Jankatarch@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    Now put it on your bookshelf for your children to find. Keep the chain going until it’s antique and expensive enough to start making them happy.

  • robolemmy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Get them back… keep a copy of “Toxic Parents” prominently on your bookshelf.

    True story: I was reading that book way back in the early 1990s and my stepdad came over for some reason. I went to put on shoes and when I came back, he had the book in his hands, looking at the cover. He dropped it like it was on fire, we traded an awkward look, then never spoke of it again.