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| subject: | Re: In Portland, OR, as a single father |
-=> Quoting Damon A. Getsman to Nancy Backus on 05-Feb-2015 18:14 <=- NB>> It's good you have a roof over your head, but granted, that's still NB>> nowhere near an ideal situation... DAG> It's much better than hitching it along the pacific shoreline headed DAG> for Chile', at least. ;) For sure.. NB>> Have you considered getting him some sort of electronic book reader, NB>> and downloading books for him...? Or is that out of the question NB>> financially...? How far away is the library...? It's a shame that NB>> things are less safe than they were back when I was a kid... I used to NB>> hang out at the local library all the time, could walk there from NB>> home... DAG> Well, for now it's out of the question financially. We've got a DAG> couple of portable electronic devices now that are capable, but too DAG> small for easy reading. I'm not sure where the closest library is, DAG> just a few that I've stumbled across. I'll open a google maps tab for DAG> that right now, actually. Yeah, I used to go to one, too. About a mile DAG> away, but I'd stay there for a looooong time. Plus my dad always took DAG> me there to hang out while he was checking out stamp catalogs and value DAG> guides. Heh. I'll look into finding a cheap 400MHz android ripoff DAG> tablet or something, though. I didn't think about that because I hate DAG> electronic format books so much, but I don't think he'll hate it at DAG> all. They're amazingly cost effective, so yeah. Thank you for the DAG> awesome idea. I've not wanted to use the electronic books, either, but I've seen several people using them, including some of my family (sisters, nieces), and they seem to think they are a good idea... :) I just figured that a kid that's into video games AND reading might find them an easier transition away from the games... :) DAG> I've got a lot of theories on the whole thing, personally, and so DAG> does my roommate. One of the worst horror stories I've heard about it, DAG> though, was a father who realized that his daughter had hit 16 years DAG> old and, at tops, had had like 75 minutes unscheduled time before. DAG> What kind of pressure cooker are we putting kids like that into? How DAG> are they going to know how to socialize? It just seems like an inhumane DAG> way to raise a kid, to me, and if they spend all of their time in DAG> structured activities, how the hell are they going to get the practice DAG> that they need to be able to deal with what the real world throws at DAG> them out on the streets? I mostly agree with you, but, that being said, I think there's more socializing even in the structured activities than you give credit for... What's more of an issue is what one does once they are responsible for setting their own structure instead of having it imposed on them... :) DAG> Sorry about the one kid thing, if you were hoping to have more. Thanks. We did try, very unsuccessfully, for a long time... it just wasn't going to happen, and it turned out that having even the one was a bit of a fluke, or miracle, if you will... :) DAG> I want to have a sibling for my son, other than DAG> his half sisters (in Germany), but my life isn't nearly stable enough DAG> and I don't have a decent mother candidate in mind. Heh. By the time DAG> I have all of those things squared away I'm pretty sure I'm only going DAG> to be dating post-menopausal women. If it happens, it happens... And maybe you'll find some wonderful woman that has a child or children of her own that you'll both be comfortable with... ;) DAG> You're right, though. I always hated being an only child. It was DAG> a horror, especially with abusive parents. Abusive parents only make it worse, true. My son at least had cousins, and my youngest siblings, and a friend from church to be semi-sibs... and he tended to make friends pretty easily... :) NB>> Keeping him clothed and fed and in school should go a ways in showing NB>> that you are a proper father, however... and the other hopefully will NB>> come as you are better stabilized and can find a decent job... :) DAG> Indeed. I'm just glad I'm out of the phase where I feel I'm looking DAG> for the light at the end of the tunnel, and into a phase where I DAG> actually am out in the light, or at least close enough to it so that DAG> it's not just a dot any more. :) I'm really well stabilized now, for DAG> the most part, and it only gets better; right now I'm more stable than DAG> I've been since I started college. I've been putting out enough code DAG> each day to keep my portfolio nice 'n full along with applying for jobs DAG> hours every day. I'm pretty sure with the amount of effort that I'm DAG> putting into things that I'll have many fewer unstructured hours in my DAG> own day very soon. ;) Hope it works out for you soon... :) ttyl neb ... Life is a collection of low-probability events --- EzyBlueWave V3.00 01FB001F* Origin: Tiny's BBS - Oshawa, ON, CA http://tinysbbs.com (1:229/452) SEEN-BY: 3/0 633/0 267 280 281 408 640/384 712/0 620 848 770/1 @PATH: 229/452 426 123/500 261/38 712/848 633/280 267 |
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