I think of the Radiolab story as a cautionary tail, if you try to capture all the special moments, you'll end up preventing them from happening in the first place. Many (most?) people only feel comfortable being themselves when a permanent record isn't being kept. By trying to always photograph your kid, they may start to feel like they have to put up a facade all the time. I know I certainly would.
I'm not sure why, but this post makes me happy ? Perhaps it's the fact that a parent is trying to keep such records and has this little hobby,project as a means to remeber his child for future dates of what life use to be like?
My family hardly has any, the only pictures I have of my younger self is a rare vacation and grade school pictures. Social media and smart phone advancements have really changed the "special" effect a photograph use to have.
But more importantly I don't have any audio of my childhood and that is something I would love to hear now.
I'm probably too socially awkward to understand this obsession with documenting ones offspring in minute detail. but then I have zero interest in having kids.
Trite as it sounds, having kid does change you, and re-aligns your priorities - especially as they start to get older. You realize pretty quickly in the process that they grow, and change, and you can never have the old - but ironically, younger - version of the child back. And there's huge bits of joy in all of it, and you want to preserve it for later, as best as you can.
Having said that - if you don't want to kids, don't have kids. Don't let people push you into it. They're great if they want them, but it's hard.
The guy in this needs to get off his phone, this whole thing lacks self-awareness... There is a difference between playing with your phone around your kid all the time and spending time with your kid.
I build an audio ring-buffer app. At any point I can save up to 30 min after they happened. This is a strange kind of surveilance: strictly speaking I'm only (permanently) recording when I decide to have done it afterwards.
In a way I can ask "is it ok if I record you for the past 5 minutes?"
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 35.8 ms ] threadI think of the Radiolab story as a cautionary tail, if you try to capture all the special moments, you'll end up preventing them from happening in the first place. Many (most?) people only feel comfortable being themselves when a permanent record isn't being kept. By trying to always photograph your kid, they may start to feel like they have to put up a facade all the time. I know I certainly would.
My family hardly has any, the only pictures I have of my younger self is a rare vacation and grade school pictures. Social media and smart phone advancements have really changed the "special" effect a photograph use to have.
But more importantly I don't have any audio of my childhood and that is something I would love to hear now.
I'm probably too socially awkward to understand this obsession with documenting ones offspring in minute detail. but then I have zero interest in having kids.
Having said that - if you don't want to kids, don't have kids. Don't let people push you into it. They're great if they want them, but it's hard.
In a way I can ask "is it ok if I record you for the past 5 minutes?"