Since I guess they are saying they didn't have a dad, that's their problem. I pretty much trace all of our problems with cuckery today back to the huge number of kids that had absentee fathers at best. I felt like a minority in school for living in a household with both parents, and this was 20 years ago.
When I look at myself though, a ton of the way I am comes from my dad and my grandfathers. The amount of life experience I lose out if I take those people away is absolutely massive and I'm not sure who I'd be without. Most likely, a hell of a lot closer to the general cucked man, because a lot of the skills, mindset, whatever that set me apart from that I wouldn't have gotten from any of the women around me growing up.
Pride in the degree and duration of suffering one can endure is a uniquely masculine trait, and from that fountain flows all virtue - man's ability to envision and make manifest great works, his ability to engage in the daily self-sacrifice required to father and raise the next generation, his ability to fight to preserve himself and his progeny, and his ability to demonstrate uncompromising moral resolve.
The weakening of the men of a nation is a most certain harbinger of its end, and the swiftest way to weaken the men of a nation is to ensure they never truly reach manhood by denying them access to the rites and rituals of passage that can only be passed on by other men - first fathers, then peers to reinforce the lessons learned and to help men prepare for fatherhood and their own turn to forge a link in the chain.
100%. I grew up without a Dad and yeah it really screws you up. Even worse if your mom's a feminist.
I somehow managed to avoid drug abuse, managed to graduate highschool, get through, college, all of the things that it's so easy to take for granted if you have both parents.
I never forget I basically won the equivalent of the powerball. I'm pretty much the only one from my old school with that sort of background to actually be making something of him,self.
Others I know of include a guy who overdosed in his bedroom at his mom's house. Another stocks Walmart shelves. Another worked at a comic book shop the last I heard. He liked to pester the girls coming in to shop there and was also a serial liar. Probably got arrested for being a sex pest at this point for all I know. Another was redneck Chris-chan. The highest achieving one works at the same bar his mom's at and his hobbies consist of vidya and pot. Harmless but wasted potential.
It's really sobering.
The thing that scares me to death is I'll continue the cycle. Kids growing up in that background have high rates of divorce themselves, and I know for sure I got absolutely zero sense of what a healthy relationship looked like when I was growing up with 'dear old mom'.
I'm incredibly blessed to be where I am, but it saddens me to no end that generations of people are being screwed up by these awful home lives. Thankfully we have people like Jordan Peterson and Warren Farrell talking about it, and Tucker Carlson made a fan out of me when he spent a whole entire week talking about these issues back around 2018.
Since I guess they are saying they didn't have a dad, that's their problem. I pretty much trace all of our problems with cuckery today back to the huge number of kids that had absentee fathers at best. I felt like a minority in school for living in a household with both parents, and this was 20 years ago.
When I look at myself though, a ton of the way I am comes from my dad and my grandfathers. The amount of life experience I lose out if I take those people away is absolutely massive and I'm not sure who I'd be without. Most likely, a hell of a lot closer to the general cucked man, because a lot of the skills, mindset, whatever that set me apart from that I wouldn't have gotten from any of the women around me growing up.
Pride in the degree and duration of suffering one can endure is a uniquely masculine trait, and from that fountain flows all virtue - man's ability to envision and make manifest great works, his ability to engage in the daily self-sacrifice required to father and raise the next generation, his ability to fight to preserve himself and his progeny, and his ability to demonstrate uncompromising moral resolve.
The weakening of the men of a nation is a most certain harbinger of its end, and the swiftest way to weaken the men of a nation is to ensure they never truly reach manhood by denying them access to the rites and rituals of passage that can only be passed on by other men - first fathers, then peers to reinforce the lessons learned and to help men prepare for fatherhood and their own turn to forge a link in the chain.
100%. I grew up without a Dad and yeah it really screws you up. Even worse if your mom's a feminist.
I somehow managed to avoid drug abuse, managed to graduate highschool, get through, college, all of the things that it's so easy to take for granted if you have both parents.
I never forget I basically won the equivalent of the powerball. I'm pretty much the only one from my old school with that sort of background to actually be making something of him,self.
Others I know of include a guy who overdosed in his bedroom at his mom's house. Another stocks Walmart shelves. Another worked at a comic book shop the last I heard. He liked to pester the girls coming in to shop there and was also a serial liar. Probably got arrested for being a sex pest at this point for all I know. Another was redneck Chris-chan. The highest achieving one works at the same bar his mom's at and his hobbies consist of vidya and pot. Harmless but wasted potential.
It's really sobering.
The thing that scares me to death is I'll continue the cycle. Kids growing up in that background have high rates of divorce themselves, and I know for sure I got absolutely zero sense of what a healthy relationship looked like when I was growing up with 'dear old mom'.
I'm incredibly blessed to be where I am, but it saddens me to no end that generations of people are being screwed up by these awful home lives. Thankfully we have people like Jordan Peterson and Warren Farrell talking about it, and Tucker Carlson made a fan out of me when he spent a whole entire week talking about these issues back around 2018.