Politics & Current Events
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
Duggar miscarriage episode--recap/thoughts?
So, I DVR'd it last night and watched this morning. Honestly, it upset me less than I thought it would, and I even watched it holding LilShirley. I did really feel for them, though--I've never seen these people truly express sadness. Say what you will about their ideas regarding family planning, but it is incredibly evident that the lost child was loved and wanted.
I am serious...and don't call me Shirley.
Re: Duggar miscarriage episode--recap/thoughts?
I hate on the Duggars as much as possible, but I thought it was ok. With the exception of airing the scene when the kids found out. They deserved privacy at that moment.
But their grief was real. And she seems more fundie than him.
I haven't seen it, but I think it is good to make these things public if you're already a public person. Having a loss is such a lonely thing b/c it's a taboo topic for some reason. The more people that talk about it, the less taboo it becomes.
this is how I feel.
my read shelf:
I have not watched it yet, but I am fuming that they filmed them telling the kids.FUSCKS them.
Ya but doesn't that open up the debate, at least a little, on whether or not to treat the death of a child to that of a miscarriage (and the definitions thereof of course)?
I don't think so. I am not really worried abotu the bigger debate on whether this was the death of a child or a miscarrage or both in this circumstance. These kids were ALL taught that this was a child, their baby sister, and that she was now dead. And they filmed, for the entire world to see, their children's reactions to that news the moment they found out. That is absolutely horrible to me. The kids deserved the privacy in the moment to react how they needed to.
I loathe much of what the Duggars are about, but I'm watching the episode for the second time and it still breaks my heart. I can't imagine. The tiny coffin - I just...ugh.
If they needed the service for closure, I'm not going to hate on them for it.
I truly do not have an issue with the service and believe that everyone needs to greive in their own way. And I also believe the baby was very much wanted, even if I strongly disagree with their home life.
Telling the kids on film is not part of the greiving process.
Your baby has no heartbeat? Let's pray and delicately wipe tears. I mean, I probably wouldn't ugly cry on tv, either, but I'd shove the camera out of my way to proceed to ugly cry.
And the scene with jimbob passing around tissues and giving kisses. It seemed almost jovial. It was so... weird. The younger kids clearly don't get it, and they didn't at the funeral. I mean, that's fine, but that's also why you don't tell 19 kids as a group instead of in age appropriate cohorts.
I can see why they'd put on such a display given the agenda and worldview they're advertising. I'm sure they think they're setting a good, Christian example. It's fuckingnuts in a number of contexts, but I can see why they'd do it.
I can see that. Haven't watched it... yet. I want to see this one now. But just this one.
Maybe. It also could have been that they are so used to hiding the real stuff from the cameras after all this time.
There is also the principle that is prevalent in gothardism - and that is keeping sweet. Many girls are taught from a young age that the only proper emotion is happiness or joy, and after awhile, that is the only emotion that they portray.
Did you notice the lack of real hugs? Like I said, I don't doubt the grief is real, and Michelle showed some real moments, but the rest of it was either staged or felt off b/c in my family everyone would be embraced in real hugs, petting someone's hair, doing something, anything, to indicate real human affection.
Apparently I didn't cry at my mom's funeral, so I don't think the lack of reaction from the little kids was noteworthy. I just noticed the side-hugs of the older kids.
Aren't side hugs just how they hug so as to avoid boobs being pressed up in such a way that might cause the guys to do something that goes against their otherwise repressed sexuality? I don't see the lack of "real" hugs as any indication that the grief wasn't real. When my FIL died there was very little hugging because my IL's just don't do that, and the death, while grievously sad, didn't suddenly trigger that behavior.
Emotions are a very tricky beast. I've cried more over the loss of a pet cat than I did over my own grandmothers, so I can't really judge how people choose to express (or not express) their grief.
Yes, they beat them until they stop crying.
But, they side hug the boys and young girls. No breasts there.
I don't really judge any expression of grief. Like I said, I'm sure it was genuine, but it really didn't come across that way. I heaved wracking sobs when I got the email my dog died, I cried ugly tears a couple weeks ago when an acquaintance died in a hiking accident, but I never cried (in public) for my mom.
So, yes, I get that expression of grief is different. You may have a different interpretation of the episode, that's fine. Mine is that it was odd, although I can't exactly say why which is why I mention details that were unexpected.
I think a D&C, or would it be a D&E at that far along? I'm not sure. She mentioned having a couple days with the baby after finding out it was dead before delivering.
They are Grothardites. Links on their website, Michelle giving seminars on how to be a good Gorthardite submissive wife, etc. They use the ATI homeschooling program, go to ATI conferences every year.
Thank you for clarifying!