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  7. Jennifer Senior: For parents, happiness is a very high bar

Jennifer Senior: For parents, happiness is a very high bar

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Video by: TED
The parenting section of the bookstore is overwhelming—it's "a giant, candy-colored monument to our collective panic," as writer Jennifer Senior puts it. Why is parenthood filled with so much anxiety? Because the goal of modern, middle-class parents—to raise happy children—is so elusive. In this honest talk, she offers some kinder and more achievable aims. TEDTalks is a daily video podcast of the best talks and performances from the TED Conference, where the world's leading thinkers and doers give the talk of their lives in 18 minutes (or less). Look for talks on Technology, Entertainment and Design -- plus science, business, global issues, the arts and much more. Find closed captions and translated subtitles in many languages at http://www.ted.com/translate Follow TED news on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tednews Like TED on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TED Subscribe to our channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/TEDtalksDirector
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Video Transcript

0:13
When I was born,
0:14
there was really only one book
0:16
about how to raise your children,
0:18
and it was written by Dr. Spock.
0:21
(Laughter)
0:23
Thank you for indulging me.
0:24
I have always wanted to do that.
0:28
No, it was Benjamin Spock,
0:30
and his book was called "The Common Sense Book of Baby And Child Care."
0:34
It sold almost 50 million copies by the time he died.
0:39
Today, I, as the mother of a six-year-old,
0:43
walk into Barnes and Noble,
0:44
and see this.
0:47
And it is amazing
0:49
the variety that one finds on those shelves.
0:53
There are guides to raising an eco-friendly kid,
0:57
a gluten-free kid,
0:59
a disease-proof kid,
1:02
which, if you ask me, is a little bit creepy.
1:06
There are guides to raising a bilingual kid
1:08
even if you only speak one language at home.
1:11
There are guides to raising a financially savvy kid
1:15
and a science-minded kid
1:18
and a kid who is a whiz at yoga.
1:21
Short of teaching your toddler how to defuse
1:24
a nuclear bomb,
1:25
there is pretty much a guide to everything.
1:32
All of these books are well-intentioned.
1:34
I am sure that many of them are great.
1:39
But taken together, I am sorry,
1:43
I do not see help
1:45
when I look at that shelf.
1:49
I see anxiety.
1:51
I see a giant candy-colored monument
1:54
to our collective panic,
1:57
and it makes me want to know,
2:00
why is it that raising our children
2:02
is associated with so much anguish
2:04
and so much confusion?
2:06
Why is it that we are at sixes and sevens
2:09
about the one thing human beings
2:12
have been doing successfully for millennia,
2:14
long before parenting message boards
2:16
and peer-reviewed studies came along?
2:19
Why is it that so many mothers and fathers
2:22
experience parenthood as a kind of crisis?
2:28
Crisis might seem like a strong word,
2:31
but there is data suggesting it probably isn't.
2:34
There was, in fact, a paper of just this very name,
2:36
"Parenthood as Crisis," published in 1957,
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