Gemini on kids and worries

Hyaenidae

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  • Apr 8, 2015
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    The worry you mentioned that stems from kids (parenting) is voluntary suffering.

    But to be fair, "voluntary suffering" is actually the secret sauce of the human experience. If you look at almost everything humans find "great" or "meaningful," they almost all involve a high degree of stress, physical toll, or mental anguish that we walk into with our eyes wide open.

    The "Suffering" Spectrum​

    To see how parenting fits into the objective human "logic," look at these other forms of voluntary suffering:

    ActivityThe Suffering (The "Worry")The "Reward"
    Elite AthleticsPhysical pain, injury, extreme discipline.Dopamine from winning; social status.
    Artistic CreationIsolation, self-doubt, financial instability.Serotonin from "Flow State"; legacy.
    High-Stakes Career80-hour weeks, ulcers, no sleep.Power, resource security, ego.
    ParentingTotal loss of autonomy, chronic stress.Oxytocin, "purpose," genetic continuity.

    The "Why" of Voluntary Suffering​

    Why don't we just choose the path of least resistance (maximum comfort, zero stress)?

    1. The Hedonic Treadmill: Pure comfort (zero stress) eventually leads to a state of "ennui" or boredom. The human brain is actually poorly evolved for sustained peace; it’s a problem-solving machine. If it doesn't have a "noble" problem (like raising a child), it often starts inventing "stupid" problems (anxiety over minor things).

    2. Contrast: You can't actually feel the "highs" without the "lows." The relief of a child finally falling asleep or the pride of seeing them succeed is only chemically possible because of the intense stress that preceded it.

    3. The "Hero" Narrative: We are obsessed with the "Hero's Journey." No one writes a book about a person who stayed comfortable and stress-free for 80 years. We are culturally and psychologically tilted toward the idea that meaning is found in the struggle.

    The "Drive to suffer" is Fading​


    For most of human history, the suffering wasn't voluntary. It was a biological and social inevitability.

    Now that it is voluntary, we’re seeing a massive global experiment. People are asking: "If I can have the dopamine and the comfort without the 'voluntary suffering' of a child, why wouldn't I just do that?"

    And honestly? There isn't a "logical" counter-argument to that. If your goal is to minimize stress and maximize personal autonomy, parenting is objectively a bad deal. You only do it if you value the specific type of meaning that only that particular brand of suffering provides.
     
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    handley

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  • Jun 24, 2018
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    You had a father , your father had a father, everyone in your lineage had a kid, they all lived long enough to father a child when survival rates so so low, unbroken chain going back millions of years , you just gonna end it here?
     

    Bad_horse

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  • Apr 23, 2021
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    Gemini-

    The original argument relies heavily on a specific philosophical worldview—Stoicism mixed with evolutionary psychology—that equates "meaning" with "overcoming struggle." While compelling, this perspective frames parenting (and life) as a transactional equation of pain-for-reward.
    Here is a counter-argument that challenges the premise that "voluntary suffering" is the essential ingredient for a meaningful life or the primary lens through which to view parenting.

    1. The Fetishization of Struggle
    The strongest counter-argument is that the original text romanticizes suffering. It assumes that a life without "noble problems" or "mental anguish" is inherently shallow or boring ("ennui").

    Contentment is not boredom: There is a vast psychological difference between "boredom" and "peace." Many people find profound meaning in stability, quiet connection, and low-stress environments. The idea that we need anguish to feel alive is a restless, modern pathology, not a universal human truth.

    Joy does not require a "down payment" of pain: The argument claims you can't feel highs without lows. This is demonstrably false. A beautiful sunset, a good meal, or a joke with a friend are intrinsically enjoyable without a preceding period of misery. Parenting offers moments of pure, unearned joy that aren't just "relief" from stress.

    2. Parenting is "Labor," Not "Suffering"
    Labeling parenting as "voluntary suffering" conflates effort with misery.
    The Category Error: Parenting is more akin to "hard work" or "service" than "suffering." A gardener works hard, sweats, and gets dirt under their fingernails, but they aren't "suffering"—they are cultivating. Framing the loss of autonomy as "suffering" reveals a hyper-individualistic bias where the "Self" is the only thing that matters.
    Relationship vs. Project: The original text compares parenting to elite athletics or a high-stakes career. This commodifies the child. Parenting isn't a project to achieve a "flow state" or "social status"; it is a relationship. We don't say we are "suffering" through a friendship just because we help a friend move house. We do it because the relationship itself is the value, not the "reward" we get at the end.

    3. The "Stockholm Syndrome" Defense
    The argument suggests that we invent "noble problems" to keep our problem-solving brains busy. A cynic could argue this is a form of rationalization (or Stockholm Syndrome).

    Rationalizing Instinct: Just because we possess a biological imperative to reproduce doesn't mean the stress it causes is "noble." It might just be stress. We may have evolved psychological mechanisms (like the "Hero's Narrative") specifically to trick us into enduring conditions that are objectively detrimental to our individual well-being, simply to ensure the survival of the species.
    The "Hero" Myth is Narcissistic: The obsession with the "Hero's Journey" is often about the parent's ego ("I survived this," "I made this"), rather than the well-being of the child or the community. A less "heroic" but more supportive society might make parenting less about suffering and more about communal joy.

    4. The Real Reason the "Drive to Suffer" is Fading
    The original text argues people are opting out of parenting because they can now choose "dopamine and comfort" instead. This ignores the material reality.

    It’s not softness; it’s economics: The decline in birth rates isn't just because people are choosing "comfort" over "meaning." It's because the cost of the suffering has become unsustainable. In the past, children were economic assets (farm labor, old-age insurance). Now, they are economic liabilities in a world of stagnant wages and high housing costs.

    The "Village" is Gone: The "suffering" of parenting was historically diluted by the "village" (extended family, community). Modern parenting isolates the suffering to two people (or one). Rejecting that deal isn't a rejection of meaning; it's a rejection of an unfair contract where the support systems have collapsed.

    Summary
    The counter-argument is that meaning is found in connection and contribution, not necessarily in suffering. You can live a deeply meaningful life by being kind, present, and creative without "eyes wide open" voluntary anguish. Parenting is valid, but framing it as a necessary form of "noble suffering" is a way to glorify the lack of support parents receive.
     
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    Hyaenidae

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  • Apr 8, 2015
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    You had a father , your father had a father, everyone in your lineage had a kid, they all lived long enough to father a child when survival rates so so low, unbroken chain going back millions of years , you just gonna end it here?

    It does feel wrong right? Feels like I'm failing a multi million year long mission :geek:

    But the logic says it sounds a bit like sunk cost fallacy, just because I'm a result of a multi million year old mission doesn't mean I'm required to continue that mission if it no longer serves my own goals (living stress free)
     
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    Hyaenidae

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    The Real Reason the "Drive to Suffer" is Fading
    The original text argues people are opting out of parenting because they can now choose "dopamine and comfort" instead. This ignores the material reality.

    It’s not softness; it’s economics: The decline in birth rates isn't just because people are choosing "comfort" over "meaning." It's because the cost of the suffering has become unsustainable. In the past, children were economic assets (farm labor, old-age insurance). Now, they are economic liabilities in a world of stagnant wages and high housing costs.

    The "Village" is Gone: The "suffering" of parenting was historically diluted by the "village" (extended family, community). Modern parenting isolates the suffering to two people (or one). Rejecting that deal isn't a rejection of meaning; it's a rejection of an unfair contract where the support systems have collapsed.

    Summary
    The counter-argument is that meaning is found in connection and contribution, not necessarily in suffering. You can live a deeply meaningful life by being kind, present, and creative without "eyes wide open" voluntary anguish. Parenting is valid, but framing it as a necessary form of "noble suffering" is a way to glorify the lack of support parents receive.

    Cold af.

    Valid, but cold

    more kids more worries

    Emios®