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So i would say that it depends on how easy a person gets affected by it.
Parents are actually the least important to a child's social development. Research is beginning to point to that peers are far more important to what an individual is involved in or believes. The most significant thing that passes down is probably the parenting style. Unless the child is someone teachable and seeks/accepts wisdom, they would have the attitude of "don't tell me what to do" or somehow believing that seeking help shows weakness. I've had at least 1 good parent, and plenty of mentors. I've grown up learning things either through reflection or other adults. I've gotten most of my activities from my friends introducing them to me. Either case, a person is not like a sponge soaking up whatever is poured into them, neither are they like a rock where nothing effects them.I have to blame this one on parents (well most of them).
Commercialized studies might not be as reliable. There are plenty of reliable scholar sources that explain the significance of each social role in a person's life.That peer stuff is total bs. It seems u could believe anything if they say "the study has shown".
Keep in mind that things like this have been thoroughly study, reviewed, and revised over decades. Unless you've read the research, seen the world, and thought outside of your own head, you'd never have anything more than an opinion.Summary
During adolescence, peers play a large part in a young person’s life even while the family continues to be significant. In general, peer friendships offer youth with many positive opportunities despite the negative connotations that peer relationships have to many of us. Peer relationships are actually important for healthy development and essential for youth to develop into healthy adults. Nonetheless, peer relationships also have the potential to encourage problem behaviors. Although the negative influence of peers is often over-emphasized, more can be done to help teenagers experience the family and the peer group as mutually constructive environments. To accomplish this, families, communities, churches, schools, 4-H and other youth groups can all contribute to helping youth develop positive peer relationships, and deflect negative peer pressures and influences.
So did he never have friends? relatives? no one at school? Hearing it from his side would be completely different and well-explained more than you've given.My lil bro, straight As student could choose any highschool to go to. He choses robotics (topic in highschool which is the worst in town, with only people with no hope or any brain go to). He is alredy 2nd year, still straight As student. No peers could affect him.
Genetics is part of that. A child is not destined to be exactly like their parents in some way. (two brown-haired and brown-eyed parents can have a blond-haired and blue eye child.) Their interests may differ greatly as well. Even mutations such as down-syndrome could be taken into account. Their environment is just as important as Genetics too.So with same parents as me, is it more likely that two kids with the completely same attitudes were born, or were the parents teaching right?
Would you give up certain anime for your wife? I know that there's some they'd be okay with, but the explicit things most definitely needs to go. Would you watch that in front of your children? There's lots of important things you should decide early in life, because it's much more difficult to break habits once you're past 24.if your wife feels threatened by a animated character there is something wrong in that picture.
there's a limit to the liking of said character.
Would you give up certain anime for your wife? I know that there's some they'd be okay with, but the explicit things most definitely needs to go. Would you watch that in front of your children? There's lots of important things you should decide early in life, because it's much more difficult to break habits once you're past 24.