Tuesday, 28 September 2021

Unpopular Opinion is Borderline Eugenicist

Original post (numbers are provided for points I'll be elaborating on):

[An Unpopular Opinion post transplanted from Reddit to Instagram]

Older children should not expect children to become unpaid babysitters (1a) for their younger siblings.

Entitled parents should not expect (2) pre teens / teens to share parental duties (1b). Don't have additional kids if you do not have the resources to hire childcare (3). Older children can learn responsibility in other ways that enriches their life (4)They should not be saddled with the burden of parenthood (5).

My response: 

Jeez, not everyone has resources and even if they do circumstances can change (6). Single parents don't have the luxury of paying for childcare so they can go out to earn a minimum wage (7). By the same logic don't get old if you can't afford care... (8)

Annoying bloody human response:

Don't have children if you do not have the resources to care for them (3, 6, 7). YOU ARE NOT ENTITLED TO CHILDREN (9). On top of that, children do not owe their parents anything (10).

My further reply:

I have so many questions... So what are you supposed to do if once having had kids you lose those resources (6)? Lose your job, your partner, your savings, suffer illness, become disabled (6 & 7)? Will you magic your kids out of existence cos you can no longer afford childcare?! And sure children don't OWE their parents anything but when your mum is incapacitated by a severe stroke will you be able to turn your back on her (10)? Is it nice being such a horrible excuse for a human being?

(1) There is a massive difference between babysitting (1a) and parentification (1b). Asking ANY family member to watch a child (or children) on occasion is a normal and acceptable thing to do; asking that person to be a parent to your child is not. That's a given whether it's a grandparent, aunt / uncle, older offspring... The post would have had some validity if it had been taken as the latter but most people seemed unable to differentiate, seemingly saying an older sibling (of any age - 12, 14, 33) should never have to shoulder any responsibilities within their families whatsoever.
If this were purely about parents pumping out sprogs for their older kids to actually parent I would be in absolute agreement. That is most emphatically a form of child abuse (see the 'buddy system' implemented by families such as the Duggar clan - in their case with added sexism cos it's only the GIRLS who are forced to parent their siblings).
I've seen a lot on social media about dads 'babysitting' and pointing out that as a parent it's his DUTY to PARENT and he is emphatically not babysitting. Let's work on that point for a sec... Parenting duties usually fall predominantly on one person regardless of how many adults are involved and people refer to a non-parental duties adult (dad, step parent, poly partner etc) as 'babysitting' when they do it. If the non-parental duties adult(s) are supposed to raise the children - regardless of biological relationship (the number of times I've seen 'don't date someone with kids if you won't be a parent to them' (which is also BS, *IF* you take on parenting duties as a step parent it should *ONLY* be with the express consent of the custodial parent(s)) - is it really any different or extreme to expect older siblings to help out?!
Ever heard of the expression "it takes a village to raise a child"? Yet somehow we expect, nay DEMAND, that a couple (or single parent) do the job 100% alone unless they can AFFORD help.

(2) There is a massive difference between expecting / demanding childcare and needing / asking for it. Again, whether the potential provider is an older sibling or a grandparent or whoever. Taking advantage is wrong.
There is a world of difference between getting your 14 year old to watch their siblings so mum & dad can have a date night or somesuch bollocks and getting the same kid to do the same thing so mum can go to work to earn enough to feed them (see #7).
I'd say this was a thread of entitled lazy brats rather than a legitimate complaint against entitled parents who're actually being shitty.

(3) OP is literally a hair's breadth from eugenics here, essentially arguing that only the wealthy (and presumably those immune to mental and physical weakness) should have breeding rights.
Yikes.
This point also assumes that even if you have one child you will never acquire a step sibling or cousin or whatever for whom they may have childcare responsibilities foisted upon them. It also seems to presume that an only child cannot be neglected to the extent that they have to SELF-PARENT.
Furthermore I be people who spout this shit are the same people who endlessly complain that the people in power on this planet are all part of a super-elite of inherited wealth and status.

(4) Looking out for younger siblings is a principal way in which childcare skills are learned. But yeah, lets just focus on generalised 'responsibility'. 

(5) Assumes all parents chose to be parents. Newsflash sunshine, some of us never wanted kids but they happened anyway. TBH if I'd done babysitting at some point in my youth I'd have been far more careful and far more afraid of what I was getting myself into.
Also having parents is a burden and I never asked to be born (see point #10). Life comes with responsibilities - get over yourselves.

(6) The 'don't have additional kids if' bit REALLY gets me. You can be gainfully employed, a homeowner, have savings, be married when you conceive and lose the whole damn lot before the child is born. You never know what shit life is going to throw at you and only the ultra wealthy are likely to have any immunity against that kind of catastrophic life change. And if that can happen between conception and birth imagine what can happen before a kid reaches adulthood?!
Your partner can leave / refuse to pay child support / die.
You can lose your job / your home / your savings.
You, your partner, or one of your kids could suffer an illness, injury or disability that swallows up everything you have (medical bills, care bills, living aids, being unable to work due to incapacity or hospital visits etc etc) and / or require you to need physical help in looking after the kids you already have.
I find it incredibly elitist and ableist to assume that circumstances will not change. Imagine you are stable, working, have some kids... then a family member gets diagnosed with MS or cancer or something. Most families can't absorb the financial burden of an even like that. And that's assuming only ONE such catastrophic event hits your family.

(7) Personal story here: I was obliged to come off welfare and work instead. Fair enough in principle but I also had to take whatever job I was offered or suffer financial penalties. What I was offered was a split shift cleaning job 0545-0745 and 1700-1900. As I have no car / bike and buses weren't running (not that I could afford them anyway) at that time of the morning I was out of the house a minimum of 6 hours a day (I often did errands and grocery shopping en route cos all that walking destroyed my feet) when my kids were home alone... to earn £7/ hr (minimum wage at the time) for 4 hrs.
Assuming there are any babysitters who would come out at 5am and still only charge minimum wage (which, lets face it, for those antisocial hours isn't going to be a thing) I'd be paying £42 to earn £28 - a £14 loss with NOTHING left to pay the rent, fuel, food etc.
So yeah my then 14 yr old was responsible for her younger sister because there was literally no alternative. And yes, my younger child nearly died and was hospitalised as a direct result of this arrangement. I'm emphatically not recommending this lifestyle BUT I DIDN'T MAKE THE GODDAMNED RULES.
When I had my kids it's not even remotely the circumstances I thought I'd be in - for one thing at that time parents weren't obliged to work until their youngest was 16! Now it's something insane like 3 and I should consider myself 'lucky' it was 'only' 11 in my day.
How is a single parent supposed to feed their kids if they can't work?! Again, back to point #6 that just cos you have a partner at conception doesn't mean they'll stick around and not die. Anyone can end up a single parent and trust me, it's HARD.

(8) If you need to be able to 'afford childcare' (to an unknowable extent, at an unknown future rate of pay) to have kids what about getting older? Sure, paying into a pension and having a savings pot against incapacity would be good for those of us on a low or no income basis what do you suggest? Should I guzzle a case of quince gin and go for a swim when the time comes so as to reduce the burden on my kids? I certainly can't 'afford' to get old, especially if I end up like my mum...
I think we should have a Hurling Day like that episode of Jim Henson's Dinosaurs where elderly & infirm members of the herd are hurled (often by a son-in-law) off a cliff and into a tar pit. Okay, if it were actually a thing it'd probably be a rather kinder form of euthanasia but I hope I've made my point: we all face expenses we can't meet. The 'fortunate' among us won't encounter them or will die before we reach such a state of vulnerability. The rest of that need is largely met by a veritable army of unpaid carers without whom society would grind to an abrupt halt (see also: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V0yPZYBCuQU). And in that, lets not forget that an awful lot of those unpaid carers are themselves CHILDREN who society as a whole does little to nothing to assist. Yes, it's a bloody disgrace but blaming the parents for their own hardships is NASTY.

(9) Agreed. Children are NOT an entitlement or a fashion accessory. But coming back to point #3 berating poor or disadvantaged people for choosing to have a family is elitist, eugenicist bullshit. And if poor / disadvantaged people aren't 'entitled' to have a family what are you gonna do? Penalise them into greater poverty? Bring back workhouses or forced sterilisations? GENOCIDE???

(10) While I agree in principle many countries require children to pay for their parents' old age care and China has a law forcing adult kids to visit their elderly parents. In parallel we maybe should argue that kids aren't owed a particular type of childhood.
There's been at least a proposition of a law that parents have to love their kids... Sorry but that's not a thing that can be forced. Just because you have crotch goblins doesn't mean you automatically love or even like them.
Again, my personal story: my mum was a cold fish; I could never have described our relationship as close. But when she had a severe incapacitating stroke not only could I not in a gazillion years afford her care I also couldn't face dumping her in one of those awful places. The 'care' she got in an NHS hospital was appalling so heaven knows how bad it gets in those death waiting rooms.
Maybe I don't 'owe' her care in her decline but I am not such a terrible person as to ditch her. I don't even know if I could do that to my dad and he's a right toxic asshole.
I wonder if OP / asshat commenter would really be so agreeable if their beloved and pampered only child (as I would presume their crotch goblin to be if they stick to their principles) leaves home at 18 and never contacts them again cos "I don't owe you anything!"?

I may have asked the questions but I don't care to return to see if they answer any of them.
It is against my beliefs to ill-wish them but I kinda hope karma gives them a wake up call such as they end up a single parent of a half dozen kids with no familial support and minimal income and see how they fare. Their complete lack of empathy or understanding of hardships is staggering.
I privately judge other people's life choices as much as anyone; I'm particularly harsh on myself for ending up in this mess. But telling people they shouldn't have had their kids is VILE.
Mind you, I almost wish I was a callous, heartless individual who'd managed to dump my kids and my parents and have a life of my own but it wasn't to be.

Saturday, 18 September 2021

Conquering 2021

Following on from 'My name is Heggie and I am an Addict' I decided to kick off 2021 with a The Conqueror / My Virtual Mission themed resolution. This is what was available at the start of the year:



In 2020 I completed NINE virtual challenges:

  • Inca Trail, Peru (walking) 42 km
  • Grand Canyon, USA (rowing) 451 km
  • Ring Of Kerry, Ireland (cycling) 200 km
  • Camino de Santiago, France-Spain (walking) 772 km
  • Great Ocean Road, Australia (rowing) 240 km
  • Alps to Ocean, New Zealand (cycling) 290 km
  • Mount Fuji, Japan (climbing* + walking) 74 km
  • Cabot Trail, Canada (cycling) 297 km
  • Conquer 2020 (all of the above but with some extras - total 2020 miles)
I started in May and completed everything in advance of the New Year with the intent of having all 2021's challenges similarly completed within the calendar year.

I try to do each challenge in an apt way for the route (so I won't be doing the English Channel until I can swim it). I have an old rowing machine, in mid 2020 I acquired a recumbent exercise bike and climbing machine and, at the end of the year, I finally got an elliptical cross trainer.

I started 2021 with SIX challenges live and a SEVENTH code in the pipeline:

  • Pyramids of Giza, Egypt (climbing* + walking) 75 km
  • Mount Everest, Nepal (climbing* + elliptical) 64 km
  • Ring Road, Iceland (cycling) 1332 km
  • Land's End To John O'Groats (AKA LE JOG), UK (walking) 1743 km
  • Appalachian Trail (AKA AT), USA (climbing* + elliptical + walking + rowing) 3167 km 
  • Conquer 2021 (all of the above) set at 4040 miles being double 2020's target

* Climbing elements are the minimum amount required to cover the height of the whatever using a climbing machine and the conversion chart (1 min = 0.22 km); so the height of Mt Fuji, the sum heights of the principal pyramids, the height of Mt Everest, and the heights of TWELVE specially selected mountains of the Appalachians (namely: Mt Mitchell - the highest point, Currahee, Bear's Paw, Owl's Head, Goose Eye, Camel's Hump, Peaks Of Otter, Dick's Knob, Kitty Ann, Seven Sisters, Pixie, and Misery)

So here we are, in mid September (I meant to revisit this mid year but it's been a bit hectic, as always)... how's it going?!

Well, I got Giza and Everest completed pretty quickly although I have since decided to re-do the distance for Everest as ALL climbing and add that to AT. AT has been extended into 2022 to the max number of weeks as I am MONTHS behind. Not least as the goddamn cross trainer BROKE after a couple of months! I consequently changed my Conquer 2021 to a more attainable 4444km.

In the end I gifted that seventh code (for Hadrian's Wall) to my daughter (who I introduced to The Conqueror gifting her codes for Flower Route and Conquer 2021).. and bought several more for myself:

A Kruger Park challenge was introduced and then withdrawn due to complaints the route was too long & boring (they'll be relaunching it soon) so I signed up to the original before it was discontinued - I am cycling that in tandem (separate distances) with Ring Road. I am close on target with both - catching up and slipping behind again - but basically on track.

I bought the Marathon To Athens one and did the full thing overnight* August 27-28 styled as my Stupidly Long Walk™. I set out before 8pm, walked to Reading, caught a train to Slough and then walked back again via Eton, Windsor, Ascot, Bracknell... Bumped into my dad and daughter at Woosehill and didn't have the willpower to refuse a lift home at which point I discovered I was 1.3 miles short... which I did around the block! It was quite the adventure. The route through Windsor Great Park was impossible as gates were locked overnight so I ended up on country roads with no footpaths or lighting. I took a wrong turn outside Bracknell and ended up having two rest breaks on the same bench!

*I LOVE walking overnight. Less people, less traffic, less heat in summer (so less fluids to carry) and infinitely easier to take comfort breaks whenever needed!

As I set out - 7:50pm

My trainers after a good trashing, just north of Martin's Heron - 4:30am

Fortunately I took spare (if equally pre-battered) spare trainers. Unfortunately I neglected to take spare socks.

I have bought codes for a number of challenges I want to do when I've finished my current lot: Mount Kilimanjaro, Cote d'Azur, Trek to Petra, North Coast 500 and Pacific Crest Trail (PCT).

I will be doing PCT post mum. It's 2485 miles / 4000km but I have a cunning plan:

"They say you don't know someone else's struggles until you have walked a mile in their shoes? Well, I'm adding a mile for every day I've been looking after my mum. She suffered a severe stroke, unusually affecting both hemispheres of her brain, on 16th April 2018. While she was in hospital I visited her and ran errands and prepped the house to become her carer. None of my other challenges has included any distance from physically caring for her... from doing up to six loads of laundry in a day or dealing with the second major stroke which hit during lockdown and we honestly believed was the end... so I have no qualms about having covered an actual mile for each of those days - right up to her passing on [TBC]"

Will I finish LEJOG by New Year's Eve?! Who the hell knows... but I'm still trying.

I bit off more than I could chew this year but I am set to carry on indefinitely!

Sunday, 31 January 2021

Rant-19

The advert ends on the note: "look them in the eyes and tell them you're doing all you can to stop the spread of Covid-19"

WHY??? The vast majority of people who contract Covid-19 do not get seriously ill. Indeed, at least a third never develop any symptoms at all. Yet all are obliged - by law and by force and by threat and by fine - to suffer for a proportionally small minority. And now they add emotional blackmail.

Let's have them, those who are seriously ill, those who have lost loved ones, LOOK THE REST OF THE POPULATION IN THE EYES and say I don't give a fuck for your life, your death, your mental health, your education, your future. Because that's what it boils down to. Sure, if you get covid or lose someone to it that SUCKS but so does cancer or stroke or heart disease or cot death or suicide or any disease under the sun.

Babies are suffering abnormal development and non-existent socialisation. This is the largest involuntary social experiment of all time and may well have lifelong negative consequences. https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/coronavirus-babies-toddlers-education-development-school-playgrounds-b1042852.html

Children are losing out on their educations. Disruption in the early years we have known for decades is immensely harmful but we also have kids getting 'results' for exams not sat! IF my daughter graduates this summer it will be from having HALF her time at university stripped away. £9000 per year student debt for NO support, NO services, NO library, NO facilities and precious little by way of education. https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1390586/coronavirus-news-university-students-fees-online-learning Will her degree even be respected by employers who'll know she didn't attend lectures?!

We are facing a mental health crisis of unparalleled proportions. From the obvious stresses of those on the 'frontlines' https://www.theguardian.com/education/2021/jan/31/covid-stress-driving-hundreds-of-childcare-workers-to-quit-profession to the parents who're trying to work full-time from home while trying to teach their kids full time; or people like me who are caring for a loved one with no support and no respite. We're told to 'Protect the NHS' but the NHS has an appalling track record for mental health support. I told my GP I was suicidal; he replied "I don't care", it was SIX YEARS between my kid's suicide and the eventual referral to CAHMS. There'll be multi-generational depression, PTSD, social anxiety, eating disorders and substance abuse. TBH my family already had all of this BEFORE so you can only imagine what a mess we'll be afterwards. Then there's postnatal depression https://www.itv.com/news/2020-12-18/how-covid-restrictions-are-fuelling-a-postnatal-depression-crisis putting mother & baby's lives at risk. This is not a society but a sham; we are not supporting each other, we're cowering in fear and leaving the most vulnerable exposed.

Businesses are going belly-up at an alarming rate https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/0/job-losses-uk-coronavirus-covid/ the future is a terrifying prospect of unemployment, crushing national debt, devastating poverty, and empty high-streets. Y'all can argue that you can't put a price on people's lives but POVERTY KILLS.

People are suffering and dying of covid alone which is horrific and inhumane https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-55725812 but what of the (so far) hundreds of thousands of people who're suffering and dying alone of other causes or the (so far) tens of thousands of people whose cancer diagnoses have been delayed or missed entirely https://www.ajmc.com/view/diagnostic-delays-from-covid19-may-increase-cancerrelated-deaths-uk-studies-say.

Death rites are vitally important for the grieving process but we're severely limiting this crucial rite of passage from denying people contact with their loved ones to preventing funeral attendance. When my cousin Allister was dying of brain cancer his parents did a mercy dash to his bedside; his funeral was attended by hundreds. It was still devastating, especially for his parents, burying a second son in a year and a half, but seeing him one last time, seeing the church at standing-room only must've been some small comfort. To think of people like them being denied that is agonising.
"During the national lockdown, no more than 6 people can attend commemorative events such as stone setting ceremonies, the scattering of ashes or a wake." - www.gov.uk
Six people isn't even the immediate family in many instances!

Telling parents they can't even support each other at the side of their premature and critically ill baby is one of the most horrific, inexcusable things I can imagine https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-lancashire-55840222 unless it's not being able to register and grieve a baby's loss https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-sussex-52663205. Or perhaps this https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/coronavirus-heartbreak-teenagers-funeral-limited-21741773 to lose a child after a life-long illness; having anticipated a celebration of her life as a means for the parents to cope with her loss only to have to settle for near enough nothing. It's beyond cruel.


Look a child in the eyes and tell them their education and future doesn't matter.
Look a stressed out and desperate single mother in the eyes and tell her that her isolation and trauma don't matter. Say it again over the grave of the baby she smothered when it all got too much.
Look a man who's gone bankrupt in the eyes and tell him that losing his business, his home, his relationship and his self-respect to the lockdowns isn't as important as a stranger's health. Look his widow in the eyes after he dies of suicide and say it again.
Look an old woman in the eyes and tell her she can't say goodbye to her husband at the end of her life. Tell her she can't see the children and grandchildren she now hasn't seen in a YEAR. Tell those children that they can't offer their father comfort at her funeral.

If you can do any one of those things you're a truly horrible person. But we're all sitting in our homes, protecting our own miserable little lives and allowing this to happen. History is not going to judge us kindly. The moment I knew we were beyond salvation was when the churches locked their doors. The faithful ministering to the sick and dying during times of plague is inspiring; this is the opposite. We have withdrawn kindness under the false guise of protecting others.

One person's life or death is not more important than another's; the many should not be sacrificed for the few.


Humans are mortal; we're all going to die. Diseases are normal and natural, especially one like this that kills the elderly and the chronically ill - the reason the 1918 flu pandemic was so horrifying was that it killed the young and otherwise healthy. Yet in 2009 when the Swine Flu pandemic killed children and pregnant women NOTHING closed, nothing changed. My kid had it - she wasn't tested or seen by a doctor; her school didn't close or even do a deep clean. She survived, 392 others didn't... but at the time of the first lockdown only 400 or so people had died in the UK. How come nothing was done on the back of nearly 400 YOUNG deaths when the entire country was shut for just over 400 primarily OLD people?! Sure, a lot more have died now but thousands die in every seasonal flu outbreak but we go on as usual. Our population is aged and unhealthy, people have been dying at proportionally slower rates for decades. The population crisis has been under discussion for years - we NEED a pandemic to redress the balance and, for the survival of the species, this isn't even the tip of the iceberg.

In 1900 the world population was approx. 1.6 billion; now it's nearly 7.8 billion and that's with two World Wars (WWI 15-22,000,000 dead; WWII 20-85,000,000 dead), the 1918 pandemic 17-100,000,000 dead), HIV/AIDS (32,700,000 dead), and the advent of birth control! More than quadrupled in 120 years with HUGE losses. Covid's currently at 2,230,000. The death toll, taken alone or in proportion to population, just doesn't warrant the devastation the INTERVENTIONS are wreaking.

I'm not afraid of covid; of dying myself or losing loved ones to it. I'm afraid of surviving this hell and trying to rebuild. People dying is sad but IMHO people who wrap themselves in cotton wool and leave the rest of 'society' to rot aren't worth saving.