Like, I'm a bit annoyed when there's a crying baby on my bus or something, but I'm annoyed at being caught in that circumstance, not at either the parent or the child.
Now I'm getting close to becoming a parent myself, and I think I'm suddenly getting much milder. Maybe there's a relation between child tolerance and being a parent? Or maybe it's just age.
> Adopt multigenerational living.
> Cut your commute. Sacrifice space to relocate around work, or sacrifice pay to work closer to home.
Most of these suggestions are detached from reality, I don't move away from my family because I feel some arbitrary social expectation, I do it because I want space and freedom. Maybe for the few that are both A) highly extroverted and social, and B) happen to have a good relationship with all of their family members/friends family, this could appear pleasant.
Another option is to simply not have kids, no one is forcing you (outside of possible familial pressure, all the more reason to keep a healthy distance...)
At first, I thought this was just her own idiosyncrasy. Then I realized that I'm also capable of experiencing the exact same thing, in very similar circumstances, albeit a little less prone.
The weird thing is that overstimulation often manifests first as irritation, and then as irrational anger. So many times when my previous understanding was "Oh I get really angry when this happens" or "Oh this sort of thing makes me really cranky", I've realized it's more helpful to frame it as overstimulation.
Why does the distinction matter? It has different solutions! (Irrational) anger mostly has the solution of just trying to get over it, take some breaths, calm down, logic through it. That's all very well and good, but if the source of the anger is repeated, you'll have to keep doing that the whole bus ride/airplane trip/waiting room duration. If you can realize that you're overstimulated, you can make a point of reducing stimuli: rehydrating (again, I can't emphasize enough how much of a mysterious correlation there is), and basically doing a bodyscan to figure out what stimuli you're experiencing and how you can reduce them. Creating darkness, putting on sunglasses, even just closing your eyes, adjusting your clothes or seat or position so you're not getting chafed or poked or pushed, earplugs obviously help with the child crying but they also reduce other noises that might be a big factor in your irritation, often taking off a layer so you're not feeling overwarm.
And it helps to reframe it as "Oh hey my brain is processing too many sensations at once and kind of throwing a tantrum" rather than "Wow I'm really shitty and selfish and judgemental when there's a noisy child." It's been a real change in perspective.
Doubly so for children. Being locked into a rigid hierarchical familial/social situation that one is born into completely inhibits the development of self reliance, individuality, and a (healthy) ego. You are never allowed to be something that you are not expected to be by others and thus can never truly grow as a person. And if you try, you will be cut down to size, because "who do you think you are?".
For an example, just look at the people who never left your hometown compared to the ones who went and made a life for themselves. It's pretty miserable and depressing to see grown adults trapped as the same person they were in high school.
Only B is required. Why would you need to be extroverted to live with your family!?
If you do not have a good relationship with your family that is the real problem.
Why not cut your commute. Working from home has been so liberating.
> Another option is to simply not have kids, no one is forcing you
Most people want to have kids. They are the most fulfilling thing in most people's lives. Its an option, but it means giving up a lot so is anything but "simply".
For an example, just look at the people who never left your hometown compared to the ones who went and made a life for themselves. It's pretty miserable and depressing to see grown adults trapped as the same person they were in high school.
Can confirm. Grew up in a small oilfield town in Texas and could not get out of there fast enough. Most (not all obviously) of my high school peers that I kept contact with that never left did not fair as well as I did.And there's a lot of things I would love/want to do that I "simply" don't, because I either can't afford it, or its otherwise incompatible with my current position in life/security. This is part of being an adult.
And I have a decent relationship with most family members near me, but spending time with them is still eventually mentally exhausting, I moved out for a reason. I suspect more extroverted people do not experience such exhaustion from continued socializing (which would obv be more frequent in a multigenerational/multifamily home), so thats why I mentioned it.
I've actually done this. It was a massive financial stretch, but probably the best thing I've ever done for my own and my family's wellbeing...and it's not a thing that just anyone can do.
I've also done the opposite, as circumstances and life changed.
Even later in life, I've gone completely the other way. I commute once a week to spend Tuesday through Thursday near my job in another city.
Every person, situation, and dynamic is unique. There's no one-size solution that applies all of the time. The real key, IMHO, is reflecting on and knowing what you want, and then optimizing for that.
If the child is sick, the parents don't really have a lot of thought to spare on the bystanders. (Or anyway I didn't. I'm sorry if you resented the noise, but I had someone else on my mind.)
For example, when we went out to eat with our infant/toddler when she got bored I'd take her outside for a walk to calm her down. 2 - 5 minutes is enough.
Then you see parents just scrolling on their iPhone while the little one screams. If I wasn't a man and would have the police called on me, I'd ask them to do it myself.
This. I'm not sure why we pretend poor people live like that because they want to or because their society is better, when the reality is that most people wouldn't live like that if they had a choice.
For people who work as, say, a crane operator at a loading/unloading dock it's exactly a simple thing to ask ships and trains to come all the way to your house. Same thing for bricklayers, warehouse workers, cashiers, librarians, archeologists, prison wardens,...
Obviously exact expectations all subjective and what's reasonable is a sliding scale based on age of child and situation.
Most of these are tradeoffs. Space and freedom is clearly what is sacrificed in this tradeoff, but that doesn't mean it isnt realistic. I tend to agree that these are the choices people are presented with. the question is just the balance they choose to strike.
My experience is the opposite. Most people that I know that stayed in my hometown earned less but were married and homeowners by 25, had children and parental daycare by 30.
On the other hand, Most of my peers that moved to the Bay Area are struggling to make the life goals they want. They earn twice as much, but are still priced out of homeownership at 35 and struggle to raise children without community support.
Maybe your experience is different, but IMHO, community is a huge net positive, and life in isolation stifles personal growth. Not every social situation is rigidly hierarchical and abusive.
For instance, while the person who never moved from their hometown might’ve been able to hit societal goalposts earlier on, they may never have had the opportunity to explore, experiment, and figure themselves and what they want to do out (as opposed to the identity they’d picked up via osmosis from family).
Speaking personally, in retrospect I was certainly underdeveloped in that way until my late 20s and early 30s, even though I couldn’t perceive that at the time. The requisite independence/autonomy and experience just wasn’t there until several years later. Had I locked myself into my situation with a marriage and children at that age I think it’s quite likely I would’ve come to regret it in the years following, increasing risk of outcomes such as divorce.