7 Things 'Good Parents' Do (That Screw Up Kids For Life)
It seems like it's close to impossible to raise a normal child these days, what with the violent video games and the 4chan and the childhood obesity. But if the latest research is to be believed, even the good stuff we thought we were doing for our kids is ruining them.

Yes, as it turns out the most innocent things we do to our kids every day can fuck them up worse than having the Joker shoot their parents in front of them.

You'd Think...
You want your kid to be special. There are a few million Daves, Bobs and Johns running around NOT being totally awesome and obviously it's all because of their boring-ass names. So you decide to name your son something original, like Malcolm, Ivan or Dicksmash McIroncock.

But in Reality...
You have just sent your flesh and blood straight into the middle of a massive man-rape in the prison shower. According to a study at the Shippensburg University, kids growing up with ordinary, popular names have a higher chance to become law abiding citizens, while all the unusually named ones should start deciding what state they want to commit their first felony in (friendly tip, skip Texas). The study lists the top 10 bad boy names in America as: Alec, Ernest, Garland, Ivan, Kareem, Luke, Malcolm, Preston, Tyrell and Walter, which we must point out are not the names of any serial killer or presidential assassin that has ever existed, so we're assuming the research is skewed in a certain direction.

Although, Steve Buscemi played a serial killer named Garland in Con Air, so we guess that's maybe half a point?
The theory is that the additional attention garnered by odd and unusual names can cause peer ridicule and discrimination in the workforce, which tends to result in a few thousand Alecs and Prestons stealing toilet paper from the gas station. So do your kid a favor and give him a typical law-abiding, mentally stable name, like Michael.

OK, how about "Frank?"

You'd Think...
Peer pressure is the thing that makes kids smoke cigarettes, do drugs and read pornographic magazines by the time they reach middle school. As countless PSAs and after-school specials taught us, we must teach our kids to be themselves and never give two halves of a fuck about what their "friends" think.
But in Reality...
Remember that smelly kid in school, who never washed his hair, had no friends and once pissed in the sink at that party he wasn't invited to? That's your kid, without peer pressure. A study conducted at the University of Virginia showed that kids who were exposed to peer pressure around the ages of 12 and 13 turned out to be way more well-adjusted than the ones who weren't. They better understood the need to accommodate and make compromises when confronted with social pressure, rather than the "I'll just take my ball and go home" attitude they adopt otherwise.

Totally well-adjusted.
The kids who were taught to be themselves no matter what didn't become walking clones of James Dean. They actually turned out less engaged, socially challenged and statistically less intelligent, their GPAs dropping almost an entire letter grade.
Maybe more importantly, when you actually give a damn about how people view you, it develops a skill of reading the most subtle changes in people's emotional states, leading ultimately to a heightened sense of empathy. In this socially awkward age of the Internet, it turns out peer pressure at the right time can basically give you superpowers.

Empathy Man! He won't piss in your sink (probably)!

You'd Think...
Nobody wants their child to grow up a dateless nerd, so as soon as his bones harden up, it's off to football practice. There, the guy who used to steal your lunch money and punched a girl at recess in fourth grade will teach your children important life lessons about fair play and sportsmanship, which will naturally transform them into honest, hard working adults.

Like this one.
But in Reality...
Remember your school days, when Steve the quarterback managed to keep passing his classes despite firmly believing that the first president of the United States was George Washington Carver? If you suspected he was cheating somehow, a study of over 5000 students from the Los Angeles-based Josephson Institute seems to confirm it. According to the study, athletes are some of the most dishonest kids in school, with football players turning out the worst with over 72 percent admitting to having cheated during various examinations. Where does this attitude come from? The study suggests it might be the coaches.

"No, no, take the bat with you!"
But let's face it, you're not sending your kid off to practice so he can have a good time and make friends. You want some goddamn trophies, so coaches are not above teaching kids how to cut corners, feign injuries and do whatever humiliating damage they can to their opponents, because hey, nothing else matters but winning, right?

No, nothing else does.

You'd Think...
Education must not wait. Your parents waited until you were seven before sending you to school and look at how fucking sad you turned out. You'll be damned if your child suffers the same ill-fate. Is six-months old too early to start attending school? Come on, what's the worst that could happen?

Other than this.
But in Reality...
We hope you didn't have any plans to remodel your basement, because your kid will be living there for a very long time. A study by the National Foundation for Educational Research in the UK has concluded that children who start schooling before the age of six are more likely to drop out from higher education facilities, smoke weed and play guitar badly.
Researchers say sending kids to school before they've developed even the basic little-kid skills of a six-year-old can cause them to suffer from anxiety attacks and develop low self-esteem issues, giving them a bad attitude about the whole "going to school" thing that follows them throughout their education.
This does introduce children to the hopeless, bitter disappointment that is life and prepares them for their soul crushing future office workplace, but even those places want at least a high school diploma.








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Reply6 years old is kinda late unless you skipped kindergarden i went to preschool and kinnder i started school when i was 4
ReplyThe girls in #1? Are they from The Hills?
Replythe unique naming has been discussed in Freakonomics, in other way. I guess black kids with unique name get relatively comfortable treatment? it's kinda common practice in african american community.
ReplyMy parents decided I was a genius and put me in school a year early. I was a head shorter than all my classmates for the next seven years.
ReplyDicksmash McIroncock. What else needs to be said?
ReplyWith all this parenting advice on Cracked I'll have little Ghandi's instead of children.
ReplySeriously: as hurtful as it sounds, who actually reads an article on Cracked and decides: Yes, this is how I'll raise my children, thank you Cracked?
uh he sounds like Einstein to me!!!!!!!!!!
Every parent has a finite amount of patience that is mostly used up by the time the child hits age 4. By putting the child in school for part of the day, that amount of patience is extended for a longer period of time. With the invention of TV and computers, that patience is extended even more and most parents now are able to manage until their children reach adulthood.
ReplyI started school when I was 5, and so did most of the people I know. Isn't that the standard age? The country didn't go to crap yet, so it must be ok.
ok all this list aside I have one question that ive never been able to answer. Exactly how is it that M.J. has the ability to grow a beard of any kind? I mean really. with that much work done how are the follicles able to produce anything?
ReplyMaybe they grafted his bum skin onto his chin. Is the beard extra-curly?
lol I love #1. When I was growing up we didn't have "infant education" videos. We had a bunch of History Channel stuff my dad watched. I can vividly remember getting up to go to pre-school (bugger that, starting school a year before kindergarten) and watching a WWII documentary about the North Africa campaign while I ate my breakfast. It just goes to show, the human child is a very resilient thing :)
ReplySince when the hell have Alec, Ivan and Luke been 'weird names'?
ReplyMaybe I've been living under a rock, but I've never heard the name Alec before...
this is to jaffa4242..... yes, u have been living under a rock if u haven't heard the name Alec Baldwin
Number 8 would be freaking kids out about germs. It's one thing to tell them to wash their hands after touching certain things. It's another to carry around a gallon of hand sanitizer and make them use it after touching anything at all. And then they grow up to be equally neurotic.
Reply Hide All See All 3 RepliesNot to mention having weakened immune systems because they rarely if ever got sick when their immune system was maturing.
Hands aren't the only places on your body that have germs. If you're only disinfecting your hands, it's not a problem. And, to be fair, I didn't develop my neuroses until around the age of 20.
A friend of mine was telling me about her sister and brother-in-law, who were totally neurotic about their first kid, and disinfected everything. By the time the second came along, they were much more lax. Now their first kid has tons of allergies and is constantly sick, and the second kid is healthy as a horse.
All Ohio kids have to be 5 to start Kindergarten. That statement is odd.
ReplyWell maybe I'm just the exception, but my parents told me to be my own person and I'm doing great, I'm happy with who I am as a person and I have a wonderful boyfriend and some good friends that know ME, not who I might pretend to be under peer pressure.
Reply Hide All See All 4 RepliesThey warned me of the "stranger danger" more than most parents. I couldn't even leave the yard without a parent until I was about 13, and I'm definitively not afraid of anything new or different, although it has caused a slight phobia of being outside by myself after dark, but that might be partly because I'm not in the best neighborhood.
Lets see...what else...my mom also told me I was very smart (although I heard that from a lot of other adults too) and it has only encouraged me to work harder to prove everyone that believed in me right, I'm currently in one of the top private universities in my state with the highest merit scholarship they offer and have a GPA of 3.75, and have been living on my own since 17 with NO plans to move back in with my parents.
I do agree with the name thing though, although I just took a nickname that I really like. No mental scarring there and I don't have any kind of a criminal record yet.
I agree with the thing about the educational programs though, you need to be interacting with your kid, not just plopping them in front of the tv for ten hours a day.
Fun article, but honestly I think it's a little misguided.
My mom started me in preschool when I was 3 or 4 and I already addressed how I am not still at home.
You just couldn't resist, could you? You had to do it....sigh...
Thank you AnnaNymph for the wonderful example of exactly what you *shouldn't* do on the internet. It's super that you think oh so highly of your self but the harsh reality is that the rest of us don't give a flying monkey a$$hole. So kindly go crawl back into your hole and never show your face here again. Thank you!
Everybody hates you.
Illustrating one more way it screws up your kids: You raise a self-important d*****t who's not smart enough to know that nobody likes your kid half as much as your kid likes herself.
check, check, check, check, check... no wonder im so messed up
ReplyMy thoughts exactly.
those aren't my girlfriends...so why are they on my screen?!
ReplyThe worst part about the "stranger danger" lesson is that it actually harms kids. The best lesson to give kids of any age, in any country is that if they run in to trouble, they should find the nearest adult, because - if they do - 9999 times out of 10000 that adult will be reasonably able to help them and will do their best to do so. Kids are actually far safer going to any random adult on the street for help than going to a relative or friend of their parents.
ReplyThat fucken stranger danger thing is the worst. In my city, it's a major contributor to the traffic problem. During the summer, the commute is so quick. But as soon as school starts up and all the helicopter parents have to drive their precious kids, suddenly the commute is more than double. That's not an exaggeration. They can f**k themselves.
I was started in public school at 5, have a 3.4 GPA, and am on track to finish a Business major and progress to History...
Reply Hide All See All 3 RepliesException, rather than the rule. It's called the Anecdotal Fallacy, if you would care to do a little research- otherwise, let me sum it up quickly: "My parent did x even though statistically they should have done y, so statistics are wrong" This is not to say that the statistics are correct because you have committed fallacy, but there are outliers on every spectrum and they have taken this into account when peer reviewing studies.
do they not teach you how statistics work in business school?
undergrads... pfff
Is it me or does the giant read thing in the first picture look like a textured dildo. Whats that doing on a childrens show?
Replythe last line reads "The kids develop shorter attention spans, and eventually the food service industry claims another life" followed by an ad right below it is an add for a the Cordon Bleu culinary program. Synchronicity is f*****g awesome!
Reply Hide All See All 3 RepliesAds are contextual. It's not magic, you bonehead.
And honestly when most people say "food service industry" they mean quick service, not the true Culinary fields. granted, Le Cordon Bleu is a craptastic waste of money, but still there is a big difference between being a line cook and a chef.
Would probably make more sense to say "and eventually the fast food service industry claims another life"