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Andrew Gorman's avatar

Mr. Potter makes this point, but of course the problem isn't being a "latchkey kid".... it's being in a broken home. Divorce is bad for kids. The Atlantic Published this way back in 1993, so it isn't news.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1993/04/dan-quayle-was-right/307015/

Sure, there are exceptions, but for the majority of couples, getting a divorce will hurt your kids. Everyone thinks their case is the exception though... but it probably isn't. Your divorce will very likely hurt your kids.

So while we can ask how this generation will parent their kids, we might also ask how they'll approach the permanence or non-permanence of their marriages.

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Doug's avatar

I was the stereotypical latchkey kid: parents already gone by the time we woke up and they didn't get home until 6:30. I did at times resent having to look out for younger siblings but not once did I feel neglected. Looking back, the freedom was empowering but at the time it seemed normal. Almost everyone I knew had two working parents and the concept of "childcare" was foreign. My parents would have seen using daycare as both a personal sign of their failure as parents and as an unnecessary expense. Neither parent would have even considered staying home from work with a sick child.

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