I've been taking a more feminist outlook on society, and there's nothing out in society that compares to the love a mother grants to her herd or sheeple.
Nowhere can you find the unconditional love a mother grants a (particularly) a son or daughter. — Wallows
This is hard to comment on without knowing the characters involved. I'd be interested in reading more about how you apply feminist philosophy to this situation — bert1
It seems to me that 'love' is about supporting someone to develop and grow. Is your mum facilitating such development? — bert1
I don't care that you are 30 and live with your mother. My youngest child, 29, lives at home with my wife and me and we're happy to have him here. — T Clark
But - to call that feminism is a long, insulting stretch.
Also, men can't be feminists, he said provocatively. — T Clark
Thoughts? — Wallows
American or European culture seems to support the notion that children should leave home, at some point, and make their own way in the world. There is nothing inordinately superior about this plan over a traditional plan, but it's the one that we (mostly) live with. — Bitter Crank
is the unconditional love your mother gives to you preparing you to give it to others? — Bitter Crank
Is a male desireable or evolutionarily "fit" if he is to live with his mother after the age of adolescence? If not, then what is he treated as? — Wallows
I'm just not sure the question of evolutionary fitness helps clarify anything here. — Bitter Crank
I'd like to phrase this issue from the POV of a female.
Is a male desireable or evolutionarily "fit" if he is to live with his mother after the age of adolescence? If not, then what is he treated as? — Wallows
I also wonder if you love your mother unconditionally in return? How do you show your love for her, and would you continue to do so if she no longer took care of you the way that she does now? Would you take care of her in return if she needed it? — Possibility
The concept of unconditional love is regularly abused by mothers and their children to mask co-dependency. I love my children unconditionally by supporting them to develop and grow well past the point where they no longer need me. As painful as that is for me to gradually but surely let go, I know that I am not so narrowly defined by my role as his mother, just as he has the potential to be so much more than just my son.
I suggest you leave feminism out of this, by the way. Your POV is so far from feminism it isn’t even funny. — Possibility
Finally, though you have been burned, unconditional love toward a child can come (or not come) from a parent of either sex. I've seen both sexes be absolutely devoted parents or totally neglectful and abusive. Though it is true that our society generally encourages nurturing behavior more in women. — NKBJ
Well, I just think of the fact that prison populations are predominantly male, and this gives me the impression that females are less aggressive, domineering, and violent than men are. — Wallows
Nowhere can you find the unconditional love a mother grants a (particularly) a son or daughter. — Wallows
I'm almost a 30 year old man living with his mother, and I wake up every morning feeling like a kid with his mother. — Wallows
Well, I just think of the fact that prison populations are predominantly male, and this gives me the impression that females are less aggressive, domineering, and violent than men are. — Wallows
My father frowns on the whole situation. He thinks I have passed the age of leaving the nest and will always stay with my mom.
But, you know what? Fuck him. He abandoned his fiduciary duty when I was 15, when we moved to another country. So, he can go have a fig or something. — Wallows
And yes, Wallows, I know you're in the room, yet I talk about you like you're not. Having folks talk about you is your favorite topic though. — Hanover
Wrong again, this topic is about my mother, who loves me unconditionally. Though, yet again you try and tell me it's all about me. How tiring. — Wallows
It's not tiring for you at all. You delight in this conversation about you, which is now paradoxically about you to the extent we can talk about it being not about you. — Hanover
I have only expressed my unconditional love for my mother, and her's to me. Insofar then if it's about our happy relationship, and my disability, then fine, it can be about me. — Wallows
BTW I am not judging you wallows, but giving my honest reaction to the situation you describe. — emancipate
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