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© KYODOParents worried about impact of school shutdown
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© KYODO
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kaminokaze
If you cant take care of your own child, your mission as a human is failed. Children are a gift. Small little hearts with full of joy. If you cant have that gift even after it is given, you will be cursed.
deepk
Only 30% of the parents are supportive ? better to have a tired kid than have your kid infected with the virus. 70% of the parents need therapy
bass4funk
My question is, what will happen to this country if kids have to stay longer at home? What will parents do? Will they be able to handle the stress?
Paul14
Schools are not babysitters. If you can't live with your children at home for a few weeks why did you have them ?
And at my school the children get to play outside for only 20 minutes a day so they are missing no exercise at all. Let them go to the nearby play grounds and enjoy being children for once. Virus is much less likely to be spread outdoors compared to at home or in a classroom environment.
Alternatively let's coup all the children up together in tiny classrooms again, share the virus together and then the kids can bring it home to their parents and grandparents and kill a lot of their teachers too. Then a few weeks may turn into many months off school. I guess then these parents can really complain.
bass4funk
So what? Do they provide for your kids, give you money to take care of them? If you’re homeless or infected would they take you in? So who cares? People should mind their own business and stop judging people and how they raise their kids especially during this crisis. Totally absurd.
bass4funk
Played games, watched videos, talked to friends, study, the usual stuff, they’re having a blast.
Ah_so
We had periods exactly like this when I was a boy. We called them the school holidays (vacation).
bass4funk
Absolutely horrible and irresponsible! You can always go back to school, always get an education, always redo and always makeup missed classes, but you can’t make up anything if your dead or incapacitated. Parents chill, it’s not the end of the world if they miss a month or even a year.
fa477279
Japanese moms forced to be moms! The horror! No more all day school/club activities. No more after school (insert your class here) to dump the kids off at. No more time for lunch dates, shopping dates, English/tennis/yoga class. Life is hard.
shogun36
I love Japan. It's such a fantasy land where the skies are purple and street lights are blue..............
Please watch the world news people! There's a whole lot of fake news happening in Japan. There is a real world out there. Pay attention!
Children have no stress. The only stress given to them are monster nagging parents and teachers who have no business working with kids.
I can guarantee that not one child is worried about NOT getting sufficient exercise........
Yeah, it's called providing for your young ones. If you can't give them a proper lunch, you need to rethink your lifestyle. Or at least wrap it up, snip it, or tie it up. Whatever needs to be done to never reproduce again.
Taro
A second wave will most likely to schools closing for much longer than 1 month...easy for me to say, patience is a virtue though.
Taro
Re-opening schools is a knee-jerk reaction to parental and economic pressure. Isn’t safety a factor that needs proper consideration? Probably not...second wave alert!!!
Goodlucktoyou
Younger kids will suffer from game addiction. Junior/high school students will suffer from teenage pregnancies. Mothers will suffer from weeks without daily “mama-tomo” department store lunch withdrawals. Grandparents will suffer from remembering why they hate children and love their new Toyota Crown, onsens and retirement. Single parents guilt and worry.
Only winners are the bad dudes in the “home alone” movie. Actually, I think they lost out too.
AramaTaihenNoYouDidnt
Time to be real parents, no more handouts! Deal with it. On the downside, just pray these parents don't turn into abusive monsters.
Disillusioned
It would seem the problem is not the school closures. The problem is the parents' inability to deal with and educate their children.
mariasjapan
Don’t blame the school shutdown...it’s an inevitable issue so we all have to make sacrifices...be realistic!!!
rainyday
Parent with kids at home because of the closure here.
I haven't worried much about the closure itself (fortunately it hasn't upended our life, I realize others aren't so lucky), but I am way more worried about the re-opening being premature.
During non-pandemic times, my son is constantly bringing germs home from kindergarten and the whole family is usually at some point in a cycle of getting sick or recovering from something he got there.
Since he's been home though we've been totally healthy all month (kind of ironic).
But with him going back, every bloody time he brings something home its going to freak us out that it is Coronavirus even if it isn't (and god knows it could be). I am absolutely dreading that.
Making matters worse is that we haven't really received any word on what measures the school is taking to counter the spread of the virus. Being Japan the classrooms and all the facilities are very cramped and there is just no way they can space the kids apart or doing anything like that. Its very worrying.
Luddite
These complaining parents have't quite grasped the reason why the schools were closed. They don't seem concerned about their kids catching the virus.
Aly Rustom
That's really scary. But I agree. In this way, the virus has had a positive effect.
Aly Rustom
well said!
goldeneagle
I would be more stressed sending my kids to school and mix up with kids during the pandemic.
Parenthood is all about giving up almost everything for the well being of kids.
daito_hak
There are many kids that have way way bigger problems in this world so I am sorry but claiming that Japanese kids suddenly can't occupy themselves or have any imagination to do so because they can't go to their military camp... sorry school, is quit laughable. Are they so weak and incapable of being a little independent?
In Japan only schools were closed, kids were not confined at home. So they have plenty of options to occupy themselves, give me a break.
iradickle
LOL, imagine being stressed because of not having someone tell you what to do and think every hour.
Commanteer,
Sad, but very true.
So even parents can't think for themselves.
commanteer
That mental stress is likely from being free to think, learn and create for the first time in many years. It happens to many kids who are pulled out of the boot camps called schools in Japan. It's difficult for many to adjust to freedom, as they have been programmed to obey and do what they are told. If there is stress, it's a good kind of stress - the kind associated with growing.
On the other hand, the stress could just be from being nagged all day by a mother who is irritated by their presence.
Aly Rustom
agree.
we take our kids to the park several times a week, but we find parks that are sparsely populated and practice social distancing from others. Kids just need an open space to run around. But I suppose its easier said than done in Tokyo.
nakanoguy01
Cherry picked anecdotal evidence to support a conclusion. None of this is happening in my neighborhood. The parks and playgrounds were packed, with nary a neighbor giving a rat's arse. Yomiuri Land and Toshimaen were pretty full. So where is all this happening? In the boon docks?
Edgar Zardaryan
Seriously, who would make such a comment on a public platform “I almost hit my kid” that should be an immediate red flag for authorities to check that household.
borscht
Parents who ‘almost’ hit their kids because school has been cancelled shouldn’t be parents.
JJ Jetplane
I am pretty sure this stress is from the parent's side more so than the children.
Case in point.
That is interesting. In my area I've seen almost daily baseball or soccer matches between kids in the park.