No doubt, I work in a Prison, been doing it for a long time, 95% of all inmates have one parent, on fathers day the commissary won't need many cards but on mothers day you can't get enough. There is no doubt about the link. Children need both parents. There own parents too.
2007-11-02 14:46:41
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answer #1
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answered by victor 7707 7
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ALL of the child's behavior was conditioned into hir (him or her) at the preverbal level, and by words after they became the mechanism of communication, or lack of communication.
The parents' emotional drama and physical behavior are similarly conditioned into the child; without the child's understanding, or permission. We are, indeed, cultural robots, playing out other peoples' expectations of us, automatically, unconsciously, and unavoidably. Another name for this state is cultural hypnosis.
I would STRONGLY recommend you start reading books on hypnotherapy to gain an insight into the processes of psychological conditioning and deconditioning.
Also, this book http://tinyurl.com/2jlxzd will provide a -very powerful- insight into the workings of, and therapy for, the human mind. Anything by that author.
Beyond the home, other conditioning agents include the child's friends, school, church, industry, college, TV, radio, music, internet, and any and all inputs into the person's consciousness.
And so, the entire human species is flailing around in mindless cultural chaos, destroying the planet in the process. Culture is THE problem, self-actualization is the answer.
Laurie
--
Scientifically-credible info on human diet:
http://ecologos.org/ttdd.html
news:alt.food.vegan.science
2007-10-31 11:11:30
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. Consider though, that LOTS of things can be merely linked. The presence of parental separation doesn't mean an absence of all other contributing factors.
2007-10-31 10:51:28
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answer #3
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answered by Michele A 1
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I've noticed that people that come from familes that are still married tend to date/marry people with parents that are still married. The same goes for people born into seperated families. Negative, positive, that's all relative. But if I was to bet which kid would not get a divorce, I'd put my money on a kid with parents that are still married.
2007-10-31 10:56:28
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answer #4
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answered by Tim 6
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Yes. Especially if the parents have a tendency not to discuss emotions and situations with their children. In this case, children remain in the dark, lost, and tend to act out their emotions instead of discussing them with their parents, since that's what they're used to.
2007-10-31 11:00:04
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answer #5
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answered by firecatspacer 1
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parents separating can be traumatic for a
child. on the other hand, so can parents
continually fighting. sometimes you have
choose the lesser of the evils.
2007-10-31 10:44:28
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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