I know I adressed this somewhere... ahh, here it is:Elmca wrote:Wait a second, then...Soldier of Entropy wrote:In their private residence, a teenager is working on homework after school while his father/mother is on an online non-betting card leauge (poker, hearts, etc.).
I thought leauge implied mutliple humans in the game. Sorry. I should have made that more clear.
The parent was involved, socially, with other adults and refused to drop everything for the teenager at the exact moment the teen wanted them to? The parent made the teen wait a whole HOUR??!!??
Then, afterwards, the teen tries to guilt the parent into giving them more Internet time.
SoE, as has been pointed out a couple of times, you've got two scenarios here. In the first, a parent doesn't help a child when asked. In the second, the child whines about not having the same privileges as the parent. Honestly, they have nothing to do with each other.
I voted the teen was out of line. If the game could have been paused, then I could see the parent helping right away. The parent could've handled it differently, but I'm willing to bet that the hypothetical teenager has whined and bitched about his "rights" and "priviliges" and the "unfairness" so often in the past that the parent has gotten tired of trying to explain things logically and has finally resorted to "Because I'm the parent".
Christ, this whole scenario reeks of whiny teenage angst.
As you can see, I never had even intended for that part to become the main focus. I never said that the parent is being unreasonable there. If you had read this post, I believe that it would have answered your question, unless I am missing something.Soldier of Entropy wrote:I was asked for more info, and here it is:
The whole idea of "is it the parent's responsibility to get off now to help?" was actually not what I was origionally going for (though I am glad it went this way, it is interesting); I was using the scenario of homework help just to form a catalyst for the situation. What I was getting at at my original post was more along the lines of what Darth Servo was getting at; that the parent restricts web time, yet on a daily basis plays on the card leauge over more hours per day on average then he/she allows for his/her child. However, on the subject of other work, yes the teenager had other work, but he could come back to the current work later and work on other work. I hadn't given much thought to that; it wasn't my origional issue idea.
PS-Ghost Rider and Dark Servo: I believe that this particular part of the OP may clear some things up:
Nowhere there do I mention the words "in the home." Whithout such a modifier, this statement means "in all places," unless I am mistaken (which I may be since I am new to this) this means that you, Ghost Rider, need proof to prove that the rule applies only in the home.Soldier of Entropy wrote:...the teenager respectfully points out to his/her parent that the parent imposes restrictions on the teenager's websurfing time, but does not impose said restrictions on his/her self.