âAnd Then They Stopped Talking to Me,â by Judith Warner, considers the lasting torment that is junior high.
And Then They Stopped Talking to Me: Making Sense of Middle School by Judith Warner https://amzn.to/2SM2q7M

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âAnd Then They Stopped Talking to Me,â by Judith Warner, considers the lasting torment that is junior high.
And Then They Stopped Talking to Me: Making Sense of Middle School by Judith Warner https://amzn.to/2SM2q7M

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BOOK REPORT: We've got issues: children and parents in the age of medication
Weâve Got Issues:Â Children and Parents in the Age of Medication
By Judith Warner  © 2010 Riverhead Books
COMMENTARY: I donât remember when I wrote this.  I found it on my laptop as I was printing out the book reports Iâm recording for the podcast.    I remember writing it and sitting on it because I was worried that I didnât have a strong enough conclusion or endingâŠÂ  or maybe because of the delicate controversial nature of the topic â or perhaps my response.  But I decided to post it anyway.  Letâs keep this conversation going for sure.
I have not been thrown a literary curve-ball for quite awhile. This book broke the streak. I bought Warnerâs book because I enjoyed one of her previous books, Perfect Madness, Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety.  Plus the title of this new book led me to believe I was going to gather more fuel for my âwe are drugging our kids too muchâ fire. As it happens, when Warner set out to write the book she too was on the âwe are drugging our kids too muchâ side of the fence.  The book was originally entitled UNTITLED:on affluent parents and neurotic kids. Then she changed her mind. During her research for the book she claims to have discovered that the data and research available did NOT in actuality support some of her positions. So she set out to write a different book. Hence the curveball.Â
In the preface Warner states that while doing her research a couple truths emerged:
1.    The suffering of children with mental health issues is very real. She says there are millions of children in the USA who are suffering from mental health disorders. (SIDEBAR: Iâd like aspecific source)
2.    Almost no parent takes the issue of psychiatric diagnosis lightly or rushes to âdrugâ his or her child; and, she continues, responsible child psychiatrists donât either.
the NYT has a magazine article this week that is an update on their 2000 opt-out revolution piece. the original article was a sort of touch stone that we discussed in my intro women's studies class, and is deeply flawed and classist. I'm really interested in looking at this update, though, because it combines really well with SEWSA's conference topic on historic feminist landmarks and the paper I'm planning to pitch/finally write for my intro women's studies seminar. last fall I had plotted out a paper that examined the current state of motherhood studies, rooting itself in texts like Adrienne Rich's Of Woman Born and Shulamith Firestone's Dialectic of Sex. I think there's real potential for using this article/some other Judith Warner texts in this paper. just some things to keep in mind.
What About the Men?
By Judith Warner in Time Ideas on October 28, 2011
âWhat About the Men?â was the title of a Congressional briefing last week timed to commemorate National Work and Family Month. âWhat about them?â you may be tempted to snarl.
When Ellen Galinsky, president of the Families and Work Institute, first went out on the road to talk about her organizationâs research into menâs work-family conflict, she received many such snappish responses â and worse. Work-life experts laughed at her. Men are privileged, they said. They donât have the right to complain. In New Orleans, when she spoke about generational differences and gender role change, she was swarmed by âangry men,â she said in the Capitol last week. âThey were defensive. They were saying, âWe played by the rules and now youâre telling us itâs not good enough.ââ
That was in 2008, before the full force of the Great Recession had hit. This year, when Galinsky went out on the road again to talk about the results of a new study on male work-life conflict, published this summer as âThe New Male Mystique,â she got a very different response. Some men were in tears. âTwo men became emotional because they had wives at home. They felt they didnât have permission to feel stressed about work and home, but they worried: were they good enough fathers?â she said. ââThis is what I think about each and every day,ââ she recalled another man telling her. ââI didnât realize that anyone else did,ââ he said. âHe thought he was alone,â Galinsky told me. âHe asked himself, âAm I being the father I want to be? Am I being the employer I want to be?â Other men were less emotional, but they were agreeing.â
That men are experiencing work-family conflict isnât new. Indeed, itâs been some time now that they â and younger men in particular â have been complaining of feeling the squeeze in even greater numbers of women. What appears to be new is that theyâre starting to talk about it â just a bit. Which means that maybe theyâre starting to realize that theyâre not unique or alone in feeling theyâre failing at the impossible task of âdoing it all.â
In other words, men just might be poised to have a collective âclickâ moment. âMy experience,â said Galinsky, âis that, when they have permission to speak, they have a lot to say and itâs very profound and real for them.â Failure, instability, uncertainty, the self-doubt that comes from a spending a lifetime playing one game only to find, mid-way through, that the rules have suddenly changed, seem to have shaken up the old categories of self, work and meaning for many men.
Is this a bad thing? Another nail in the coffin of the Beached White Male? Iâd rather see it as a moment ripe with possibility. âA new beginning,â as Brad Harrington, executive director of the Center for Work and Family at Boston College put it at the briefing. After all, what men are starting to say sounds an awful lot like the conversational stirrings that paved the way for the modern womenâs movement. The vague sort of dissatisfaction. The sense that life wasnât adding up to be all that it was supposed to be. Even the anger from those whoâd lived their lives according to the old rules then found that a new generation â or even their own spouses â didnât value their choices, accomplishments, and sacrifices.
For some years now, sociologists have been tracking the patterns of what they call convergence in men and womenâs lives. Mostly, when we think of this, we tend to focus on how they live, what they do, spend their time, whether they do or do not empty the dishwasher or care for their children. But what about how they feel? Now that this final frontier is being breached, I wonder if we arenât poised to see more meaningful change in menâs â and womenâs and familiesâ â lives than ever before. That is: if we own the change and act upon it with courage, not fear.
http://ideas.time.com/2011/10/28/what-about-the-men/