• @[email protected]
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    605 days ago

    Mansplaining is not explaining things to people that ask questions and obviously do not have the background knowledge to have the necessary context.

  • SharkEatingBreakfast
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    415 days ago

    Whenever my kid asks a question, either I explain for like 5 minutes straight, or I stop whatever we’re both doing and we look it up together.

    Engage in their curiosity. Because they’ll stop asking you one day.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 days ago

    Look, I don’t want to be rude, and I definitely don’t want to belittle women.
    But when a subject comes up that I know something about, I just have this uncontrollable urge to share my knowledge.
    Even if it then turns out that I’m trying to explain the principle of a programming language to Grace Hopper.

  • @[email protected]
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    365 days ago

    If you never had to answer “the boundary conditions of the universe” the kid wasn’t even trying.

  • @captainlezbian
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    245 days ago

    As a young child my father got very excited when I asked why the sky was blue. I hadn’t realized he was an optical engineer or that that was what kind of question I’d asked. But I remembered the term Rayleigh scattering

  • @LovableSidekick
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    4 days ago

    Dadsplaining is often mistaken for mansplaining but shouldn’t be, as it’s the same as momsplaining.

  • Ephera
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    235 days ago

    That’s pretty much the opposite of mansplaining.
    Mansplaining is when you’re talking condescendingly to someone, while mistakenly assuming you have superior knowledge.

    If that someone has asked you “Why?”, or any question for that matter, then you’d need to start explaining something completely unrelated, in order to mansplain.

    • @JargonWagon
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      5 days ago

      I love thinking that mansplaining is preparation for the evolved state of dadsplaining. This is fantastic!

    • @thebestaquaman
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      85 days ago

      Honestly, I’ve read a psychological study on this that basically concluded the it should be called “dadsplaining” because it’s based in a natural instinct of wanting to explain things to help your kids grow.

    • @MutilationWave
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      -55 days ago

      A lot of us had absent dads. I had a father, but I never had a dad. Check yourself.

    • @arin
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      -15 days ago

      Pretty sure all dads are men

    • @bamfic
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      25 days ago

      Lucysplaining

  • @[email protected]
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    24 days ago

    So i avoided doing that and came up with terse explanations for nothing? I didn’t want to scare my kid off from asking questions

    • @[email protected]
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      134 days ago

      My strategy when I get repetitious “whys” has been to ask “why what?”

      Make them process the answer you just gave them and reformulate it into a question.

      If they don’t do a good job just say "I don’t understand your question, can you ask it in another way? "

      Kids like the ‘why’ game because it’s easy entertainment. Just make it less easy.

      • @LovableSidekick
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        44 days ago

        I tried that too but they just said “Why <whatever I just said>”.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 days ago

        Oh I have not been avoiding answering questions. I’ve been holding myself to not give long boring answers.

        And mine always asks “why <excerpt from my answer>”, not that easy :)