@@angelacarlisle1708 How is it wrong that a child is *willing* to do chores just so that they could more free time with their mom? Unless you, yourself, know what those chores were and whether or not they were appropriate for whatever age OP was at the time; keep it to yourself (I see you spamming comments with your *opinion*). Also, you (and any kids you may or may not) would *not* survive Japan as they have kids as young as 5 start cleaning up after themselves during/after school, help dish out food for other students during lunch, and generally start learning the life skills needed in order to thrive *away* from Mommy and Daddy.
@angelacarlisle1708 so nobody's allowed to think differently than you? You're silly. You're part of a family you act like a family. And people wonder why we have so many lazy disrespectful children coming up nowadays😮 none of them are being taught responsibility or respect.
@@BrookeTorres95 because shes too young to be on her own..ok do chores i agree but shes in a dangerous place being on her own at that age its pathetic..as for not surviving in Japan i really and truthfully wouldnt want to 🙄
My granddaughters, ages 6 and 7, basically grew themselves up while their parents worked at home during the pandemic. They vacuum, clean the kitchen, do laundry including folding and put away, load the dishwasher and more. Sometimes, all they need is instruction and expectation.
I grew up in the 80s. At age 7 I was left home alone from 4pm to 8pm Mon thru Fri. Babysat 6 kids at age 12. Did my chores, ate, did my homework, and got ready for bed.
I am a millenial and it was the same for me. Even had to go down into the cellar and get 3 buckets of coal upstairs to fire the stoves for heating in winter. That was in the early 90s.
@@angelacarlisle1708right? Being a latch key kid isn’t a good thing. Leaving your child home alone with no parental figures for days on end, is abuse in itself. I’d know because I had to do that stuff and I’m messed up mentally. They force children to have a whole days worth of chores to do but then complain that kids can’t be kids anymore??? 😭
@@BaldCoryxKenshinfan I grew up okay... 😅 I stopped blaming my parents long ago, and try to feel grateful because I came out independent and responsible. I can be childish and mature at the same time. ❤
Japanese kids are full grown adults everywhere else. Watching an elementary school kid walk alone at the subway station to catch her next train is next level…
Not every place has school buses to pick the kids up for school or schools conveniently located less than a half mile from home. So you did what was available, either taking public transportation or walking. Also, considering most jobs parents had either started before the school day did or the parents had to travel themselves (not necessarily in the same direction) to arrive on time for their jobs. Not saying there wasn't the same amount of craziness out there (yes and no), but you didn't hear as much about it unless it's in the immediate neighborhood or made the local or national news.
We are a weird inbetween here in Europe. Our kids go outside by themselves (not the one under 6 years old) , they go to school by foot/trams/buses/metro/trains but we don't expect them to go that far on doing chores. They are asked to put plates on the tables for example and that's all. 😂
@@Lostouille It's because you don't have to worry about some clown in an ice cream truck offering "treats" to your children. I remember walking to school on foot too when I was around 6 years old and it was safe, now, we barely celebrate Halloween anymore. I'd love to live wherever you are in Europe.
@@wowdante well child kidnappers do exist but we have alerts and tracking (when one disappear we have immediate notice everywhere with description and it worked more 90% of the time.) The only difference between our countries is the fact that our zoning laws makes it like shop and houses are mixed. So kids roam around crowded places. And crazy people are less likely to (unless massively crazy) to snatch a kid in front of thousand of people and a police station around the corner (+ cameras)
This was my life as a Gen X kid. By the age of 9 I could cook a full roast dinner. We had rules and we had parents who would whoop our asses of we did something bad. Manners were everything. I will say this though my parents never left us while on a business trip.
Also, not to shit on your use of the word, but they literally said gen X & NOT a “boomer”. If you’re trying to insult someone at least get it right lol.
@@johnjames483437 states have no law stating their is minimum age limit a child must be to be left home alone. So your statement maybe true where you are, but false in others.
As a child raised by Asian parents. We loved to do this. Because we are motivated by price. Specially with our exams, 😂😂😂 the higher the score the higher the price (money) 😂😂 even the household chores 🤪🥰🤣🤣😂 I miss my childhood.
I had a chair pushed up to the sink at age 5 to help my sister do dishes. Walked the 6 blocks to kindergarten alone everyday, then 7 blocks to Grandma's after school. We didn't get to stay alone until 7 years old either. It wasn't uncommon back then, but now it's highly unusual.
I was home alone in the summer when I was 8 years old. Mom left a list of chores and I had to have them done before going out to play. Nothing hard; dishes and dusting and make the bed. If she left me money, i could go to the store for ice cream or a comic book or go to the swimming pool. 1958 was a good year!
I started staying home at 12 yrs old cooked my meals in the microwave,great cartoons did chores, laundry mom came home at 5pm.had cousins,Aunties call in i was Good
You being appalled by a 7 year old taking care of themselves would also be appalled at my parents for making me my little brothers' primary caretaker at age 10. The youngest one called me mom until he was 4. I tried to tell him to stop when i was 12, but he started to cry, so it continued. But i really did try.
@@wowdantenowhere to be found considering more than half of these comments are saying that it’s a good thing to be a latch key kid, and to be parentified instead of having caring parents that were actually in your lives. 😭
Practically had to do this on my own when I was little too. Not this exactly but just go back a few generations and I did that. Building a fire, chopping wood, cooking breakfast or dinner for myself, and feeding the animals.
It's great for a seven year old all of my friends and family started doing most of that stuff by 9 for sure but tidying up my room from the time I could walk. I was an only child and by 9 I was getting up for school and coming home at lunch making my lunch then going home after school chores for that day Dusting, vacuum, peeling potatoes getting meal prep ready for when my Mom got home at 5. Oh ya homework done
I did all of this and took care of my sister while our single Mom worked. I didn't have the electronic innovations 71 years ago! We were taught well and how to pull together as a family. We all had responsibilities.
Reminds me of my childhood. Chores were divided between me and my siblings. I kinda miss it because it was a shared experience between us regardless of what kind of day were having.
My brother and I did all this on Saturdays in the 1970s. We were taught that if you live here, you help clean up. Useful life skills. And when you live away from home in your 20s, you won’t be pure useless. My brother can iron his trousers when his wife is otherwise busy. He can successfully feed himself.
😂 Yep. Doing households was also very common in carribbean heritage families. After you completed your chores you did your homework. There was no lying in on a Saturday either. I was able to clean a whole chicken throughly, cut it into small pieces and season it at 7 years old whilst standing on a chair at the sink. Of course if you were a boy you got off easy.
In Asia doing chores at a young age is common, they even let us clean our own classrooms, we have assigned cleaners everyday, and even rich people's kids are not exempted since most private school does it too.
😂😂😂 that high tech security camera is the best i ever seen. It catching every movement and angle at the right time. A burglar not getting out that house without getting caught
My son did his own laundry when he was seven. He also cooked full meals by himself. He baked chicken, started the charcoal grill, and grilled perfect steaks. Americans baby their kids.
"Left 7 year old for business trip" says the person holding the camera... I'm millennial and my gen Z daughter as a kid I and her now is expected to do some of the same chores this little girl was doing ... Shoot my daughter was starting and mowing the lawn at 8 years old without being asked either
I was born in the early 70s. This was normal for many in my generation because both parents worked full-time jobs. She's doing an excellent job. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
As a german kid, born in 1967 this was nearly my life. Both parents working, so I had to do most of the chores. Not a lot of time to play with other kids... But I'm still alive 😉 By the way, all this videos look like advertisement sponsored by Temu 😂😂😂
I know mom is going to see this and think that all children are like that then send me this to remind me that I'm a disappointment because I don't deep clean my room once a week
Gen Z: By the time I was 7 I got home, grabbed a snack and did homework, cleaned the kitchen, vacuumed, had my laundry started, swept the kitchen, and made sure there was whatever meat taken out of the freezer for Mom when she got home. I was a key kid alone for about four hours five days a week with a flip phone to call Mom or Emergency (thankfully never had to-), and knew to lock the door and not answer for anyone. Also knew which neighbors to find if there WAS an emergency, which thankfully never happened. I find it kinda sad kids AREN'T taught like this anymore. It's not hard. When I was done with everything I took a shower and played with my toys, watched TV, or played on the PS2 we had.
Asian children are raised to clean up after themselves from a much earlier age and the public schooling focuses a lot more on lifestyle and independence, such as the ability to cook meals and clean up after one’s self; they have rotating chore charts to clean up the entire room to engender a sense of fair group responsibility, so they don’t just clean up only after themselves, but once a month or so it’s their turn to ALSO clean the whole classroom top to bottom and take responsibility for the messes of others. It saves the school on a cleaning budget and creates a sense of responsibility to the school itself and the system of group cooperation in general, instead of encouraging hyper individuality as we do in the west. In Japan at least I know about, there’s so little violent crime and the transit system is so efficient that kids from a very young age take public transit, by themselves, to and from classes. It’s a really interesting difference in philosophy when it comes to actual life skills and preparedness, ON TOP of clobbering the US in terms of nearly every educational metric, like literacy, math, history, science knowledge levels, foreign language skills, general school attendance and standardized test scores. They’re doing something right in a lot of other places that the US will never ever adopt, I fear. We’re not so good at change.
I'm a boomer. I remember when our nation was #1 in all the things you mentioned. Our schools and colleges were the envy of foreigners. Public schools taught homemaking/sewing, woodwork, and auto mechanics. Our education system took a dump when people wanted to be liberated from their traditional way of life. The family broke up, and the kids were left alone. Morals took a hit as well. You can see how all of that has worked out for us.
WHY is this so surprising!? Me and my cousins were ALL doing similar things like this every single day!! My friends were doing it as well!! We all had responsibilities and respect for our elders and each other and Civic Duty. We did our homework and took care of our brothers and sisters or cousins and sometimes, if we were lucky, we got a little bit of change for the privilege!! Me personally, I took that money and spent a good bit of it on my brother's or on things I needed for school. Kids now don't have the drive to do that...🙄
It's an asian thing and a Latino thing, I was this independent at 7. Did my own laundry, made my own breakfast, made my own bed. The only thing i didnt do on my own at that point was make dinner and transport myself.
That was like us GenXers lol I watched my brothers while my mom worked 2 jobs growing up from the age of 7/8 and up. It's all in how they're raised and their maturity.
@@FC-PeakVersatility I know, but it's very common for content from china to be twisted into "Korean" or "Japanese" trends because some people don't believe Chinese content is "aesthetic" enough like them while Chinese culture is mocked all the time. With the casual sinophobia I see almost everywhere on the internet, I just want people to know that Chinese content isn't something to just laugh at. Sorry, I don't mean to sound defensive, it just irks me.
This kid does a better job then grown ass people!😂
Guilty
I don't know how people always manage to misspell then/than, they're/there/their............
@@PableenskeeGames🍪🥱
Straight FACTS 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@BelcherBandit The whole world is online. People speak different languages, and English isn't everyone's first language.
“Left the kid alone for business trip.” - said the non-existent camera person 😂
Yup😂
Yeah, exactly
Was thinking the same thing!!😂
I thought so too but she may have set up the phone to record, on a stand.
People when they see that they can put cameras on to tripods 🤯🤯
This was me as a kid. I knew I could get more time with my Mom if I did her chores before she got home. It was a win/win.
That's lovely! 😮
Wrong on all accounts
@@angelacarlisle1708 How is it wrong that a child is *willing* to do chores just so that they could more free time with their mom? Unless you, yourself, know what those chores were and whether or not they were appropriate for whatever age OP was at the time; keep it to yourself (I see you spamming comments with your *opinion*).
Also, you (and any kids you may or may not) would *not* survive Japan as they have kids as young as 5 start cleaning up after themselves during/after school, help dish out food for other students during lunch, and generally start learning the life skills needed in order to thrive *away* from Mommy and Daddy.
@angelacarlisle1708 so nobody's allowed to think differently than you? You're silly. You're part of a family you act like a family. And people wonder why we have so many lazy disrespectful children coming up nowadays😮 none of them are being taught responsibility or respect.
@@BrookeTorres95 because shes too young to be on her own..ok do chores i agree but shes in a dangerous place being on her own at that age its pathetic..as for not surviving in Japan i really and truthfully wouldnt want to 🙄
Kids in Japan clean the school before leaving. They are as young as 5yo.
People in Japan also keep the cities clean.
this is Chinese
I don’t think this is Japan. 😭
😂
As an Asian person, it still depends 😂😂😂
They sure do.... The Western world is spoiled.
Kids in Japan are far ahead of our own.
Very responsible.
My granddaughters, ages 6 and 7, basically grew themselves up while their parents worked at home during the pandemic. They vacuum, clean the kitchen, do laundry including folding and put away, load the dishwasher and more. Sometimes, all they need is instruction and expectation.
@@jebsmith323your child should be fkn ashamed of themselves!! Absolutely fkn disgusting. You failed your children and your grnadchildren
Parents fault
I grew up in the 80s.
At age 7 I was left home alone from 4pm to 8pm Mon thru Fri.
Babysat 6 kids at age 12.
Did my chores, ate, did my homework, and got ready for bed.
@@lovinglife69I was born in the 80s and I had 3 younger brothers to take care of because our parents worked so I definitely understand that
Just like LATCH KEY KIDS of the 80s... we were everywhere in the USA.
My thoughts exactly 💯
Latch key kid here... I was expected to do all this as well since I was 8 years old.
🎉same which is why I leave my home periodically a wreck in defiance 😂
I still have the house key from when I was 11 😂😂😂
Yes… it was a normal thing in the 70’s as well
Gen X: started cooking at age 7, laundry at age 8, latch key/home alone the entire time.
Not just gen x. Boomers too and we delivered newspapers and mowed lawns for change. No allowances.
@telalong5254 don't forget returning glass bottles for money
I am a millenial and it was the same for me. Even had to go down into the cellar and get 3 buckets of coal upstairs to fire the stoves for heating in winter. That was in the early 90s.
I started cooking at 12, and my first job at 16.
Mine did
This was my childhood it's sad that the world we live in changed so much
So what was right about leaving young kids alone thats wrong..disgusting
@@angelacarlisle1708right? Being a latch key kid isn’t a good thing. Leaving your child home alone with no parental figures for days on end, is abuse in itself. I’d know because I had to do that stuff and I’m messed up mentally. They force children to have a whole days worth of chores to do but then complain that kids can’t be kids anymore??? 😭
@@BaldCoryxKenshinfan
I grew up okay... 😅 I stopped blaming my parents long ago, and try to feel grateful because I came out independent and responsible. I can be childish and mature at the same time. ❤
welcome to every gen x kids life .
Pfft that's a joke.
@@sukamayoutube2323no it really is not
Exactly!!
@@sukamayoutube2323latch key kids were a real thing on the 70s and 80s and we were young
From a latchkey kid, I can tell you this is facts. This was exactly my 80s childhood.
Japanese kids are full grown adults everywhere else. Watching an elementary school kid walk alone at the subway station to catch her next train is next level…
Its wrong
Not every place has school buses to pick the kids up for school or schools conveniently located less than a half mile from home. So you did what was available, either taking public transportation or walking.
Also, considering most jobs parents had either started before the school day did or the parents had to travel themselves (not necessarily in the same direction) to arrive on time for their jobs.
Not saying there wasn't the same amount of craziness out there (yes and no), but you didn't hear as much about it unless it's in the immediate neighborhood or made the local or national news.
We are a weird inbetween here in Europe. Our kids go outside by themselves (not the one under 6 years old) , they go to school by foot/trams/buses/metro/trains but we don't expect them to go that far on doing chores. They are asked to put plates on the tables for example and that's all. 😂
@@Lostouille It's because you don't have to worry about some clown in an ice cream truck offering "treats" to your children. I remember walking to school on foot too when I was around 6 years old and it was safe, now, we barely celebrate Halloween anymore. I'd love to live wherever you are in Europe.
@@wowdante well child kidnappers do exist but we have alerts and tracking (when one disappear we have immediate notice everywhere with description and it worked more 90% of the time.) The only difference between our countries is the fact that our zoning laws makes it like shop and houses are mixed. So kids roam around crowded places. And crazy people are less likely to (unless massively crazy) to snatch a kid in front of thousand of people and a police station around the corner (+ cameras)
This was my life as a Gen X kid. By the age of 9 I could cook a full roast dinner. We had rules and we had parents who would whoop our asses of we did something bad. Manners were everything. I will say this though my parents never left us while on a business trip.
Holy shit ok boomer 😂😂
Why is 'okay boomer' used as an insult now?
Also, not to shit on your use of the word, but they literally said gen X & NOT a “boomer”. If you’re trying to insult someone at least get it right lol.
@Ok_Loren Yeah exactly 🤣😂
Facts!!
This Is The way They Are Raised....Great for Mother ,And Father...
It's still scripted. It's just a way to advertise the products
@@mimichachuuubut its normal in asia haahha
Its illegal to leave a 9 year old on their own
this is fake
@@johnjames483437 states have no law stating their is minimum age limit a child must be to be left home alone. So your statement maybe true where you are, but false in others.
@@mattfowler3760 BS according to you
you can leave a 3 month old alone for 3 days
As a child raised by Asian parents. We loved to do this. Because we are motivated by price. Specially with our exams, 😂😂😂 the higher the score the higher the price (money) 😂😂 even the household chores 🤪🥰🤣🤣😂 I miss my childhood.
Girl u r lucky u atleast got price , I was expected to it because I was the older kid 😂
@@Noobgamer-bm2kb I learned how to negotiate at the younger age. 😂😂🤣
@@Nurse_Ella guess I was too dumb to realize 😂👌
@@Noobgamer-bm2kb 😂😂🤣😂 dont you ever dare to tell your kids about this ninja 🥷 moves.
@@Nurse_Ella of course I won't 😂👌
I was expected to clean the house, including laundry, by the time I was 9. Not unusual when I was growing up.
Me too😂
Surely you are not british
And cook and literally wash the walls.
I had a chair pushed up to the sink at age 5 to help my sister do dishes. Walked the 6 blocks to kindergarten alone everyday, then 7 blocks to Grandma's after school. We didn't get to stay alone until 7 years old either. It wasn't uncommon back then, but now it's highly unusual.
Same. I didn't really have a childhood. If I wasn't at school I was doing chores.
Impressive that she is home alone doing all these chores while also filming from all different angles without using her hands.
It's magical aint it?😂
😂 Lol 💕
She could do it all even without the camera
That's what kids are like when they're taught responsibility instead of spoiled helpless brats
@@marilyncarter-zz4vwbut are they allowed to be a normal kid and play?
I was home alone in the summer when I was 8 years old. Mom left a list of chores and I had to have them done before going out to play. Nothing hard; dishes and dusting and make the bed. If she left me money, i could go to the store for ice cream or a comic book or go to the swimming pool. 1958 was a good year!
Bruh who’s recording 😂
I know man
A 2 yo of course 😂
The dog
COVID.
"Gosh my mom would be laughing I never did any of this"🤣🤣🤣
I started staying home at 12 yrs old cooked my meals in the microwave,great cartoons did chores, laundry mom came home at 5pm.had cousins,Aunties call in i was Good
12 is acceptable, 7 isn't.
Today's kids may not be mature enough at 7, but a few decades ago, we were more self sufficient and not coddled.
@@gsh4373 yup, the good ol days when the parents actually cared, thank you for your comment
Richard is flabbergasted because his Mum can’t leave him home alone today. 😂
Exceptional daughter is not enough like her!❤😊 teaching respect , appreciation, and moral values for self ,family, and others ❤😊
Teaching kids life lessons.👏🏻
You being appalled by a 7 year old taking care of themselves would also be appalled at my parents for making me my little brothers' primary caretaker at age 10. The youngest one called me mom until he was 4. I tried to tell him to stop when i was 12, but he started to cry, so it continued. But i really did try.
I mean, that's parentification and is widely recognised as child abuse...
Your little brother called you (instead of your mom) mom for 2 years from the age of 10-12? Where was the CPS?
@@wowdantenowhere to be found considering more than half of these comments are saying that it’s a good thing to be a latch key kid, and to be parentified instead of having caring parents that were actually in your lives. 😭
@wowdante the younger child was 4. She was 12
Practically had to do this on my own when I was little too. Not this exactly but just go back a few generations and I did that. Building a fire, chopping wood, cooking breakfast or dinner for myself, and feeding the animals.
It's great for a seven year old all of my friends and family started doing most of that stuff by 9 for sure but tidying up my room from the time I could walk. I was an only child and by 9 I was getting up for school and coming home at lunch making my lunch then going home after school chores for that day Dusting, vacuum, peeling potatoes getting meal prep ready for when my Mom got home at 5. Oh ya homework done
I did all of this and took care of my sister while our single Mom worked. I didn't have the electronic innovations 71 years ago! We were taught well and how to pull together as a family. We all had responsibilities.
She'll make a fine adult one day and from what I see she carries herself better than most adults I wish I had a daughter like that👍👍 respect😎
Your one of my favorite humans ❤
This is how we are raised in Nigeria. You learn to take care of yourself and any younger ones you might have
I Love your videos 😍
Reminds me of my childhood. Chores were divided between me and my siblings. I kinda miss it because it was a shared experience between us regardless of what kind of day were having.
He was getting mad then got calm lol love this guy
He always makes me laugh with his comments 😂
Last sentence: "aw she must be get'n paid" 😂
That's how my whole generation (gen x) grew up, latch key kids.
It's all about how you raise them!
"Take my money" 😂😂
Because this child is obedient her family will thrive. Count your money baby!❤
Leaving kids alone in some places in U S would mean parents going to jail .
Such discipline!!!! 😮
That's how a master works
My brother and I did all this on Saturdays in the 1970s. We were taught that if you live here, you help clean up. Useful life skills. And when you live away from home in your 20s, you won’t be pure useless. My brother can iron his trousers when his wife is otherwise busy. He can successfully feed himself.
I’m a Gen X so I’ve been doing all that since I was seven
😂 Yep. Doing households was also very common in carribbean heritage families. After you completed your chores you did your homework. There was no lying in on a Saturday either. I was able to clean a whole chicken throughly, cut it into small pieces and season it at 7 years old whilst standing on a chair at the sink. Of course if you were a boy you got off easy.
Hoovering...like it's the only vacuum on the market. 😂
All brits call it hoovering,
I do!
Lots of brands of facial tissues and yet… Kleenex, it is.
@@SunspriteRose7 I call them snot rags. The toilet roll is shit tickets.
In Asia doing chores at a young age is common, they even let us clean our own classrooms, we have assigned cleaners everyday, and even rich people's kids are not exempted since most private school does it too.
I was cooking full meals for my brothers by that age
😂😂😂 that high tech security camera is the best i ever seen. It catching every movement and angle at the right time. A burglar not getting out that house without getting caught
I had to do more than that, and I was younger!!! I was what Americans call a lachkey kid...
Boomers were doing it before Gen X.
@@Nick-zo6uk I also experienced that whole children are seen, but never heard business, too...
@@Nick-zo6uk Yes.
The culture starts preparing children for real life at a very early age 😊
My son did his own laundry when he was seven. He also cooked full meals by himself. He baked chicken, started the charcoal grill, and grilled perfect steaks. Americans baby their kids.
loved the way she was hovering clean floors and then a huge dust bunny was shown :-D
"Left 7 year old for business trip" says the person holding the camera...
I'm millennial and my gen Z daughter as a kid I and her now is expected to do some of the same chores this little girl was doing ... Shoot my daughter was starting and mowing the lawn at 8 years old without being asked either
I was born in the early 70s.
This was normal for many in my generation because both parents worked full-time jobs.
She's doing an excellent job.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
As a german kid, born in 1967 this was nearly my life. Both parents working, so I had to do most of the chores. Not a lot of time to play with other kids... But I'm still alive 😉
By the way, all this videos look like advertisement sponsored by Temu 😂😂😂
Clearly the child is home alone...with one sneaky ass camera guy.
Yes you can put your trainers in the washing machine. I've done it loads of times.
"She must get paid a good allowance"
The allowance is she lives another day or gets la Chancla XD
I know mom is going to see this and think that all children are like that then send me this to remind me that I'm a disappointment because I don't deep clean my room once a week
this kid straight printed out her own homework and completed it too!! what a savage
A coffee machine thats speaks to you !!!!
My son needs to see this!!
She lives in a temu commercial
Gen Z: By the time I was 7 I got home, grabbed a snack and did homework, cleaned the kitchen, vacuumed, had my laundry started, swept the kitchen, and made sure there was whatever meat taken out of the freezer for Mom when she got home. I was a key kid alone for about four hours five days a week with a flip phone to call Mom or Emergency (thankfully never had to-), and knew to lock the door and not answer for anyone. Also knew which neighbors to find if there WAS an emergency, which thankfully never happened.
I find it kinda sad kids AREN'T taught like this anymore. It's not hard. When I was done with everything I took a shower and played with my toys, watched TV, or played on the PS2 we had.
I can't get them to put the garbage in the can. It's next to it.
Asian children are raised to clean up after themselves from a much earlier age and the public schooling focuses a lot more on lifestyle and independence, such as the ability to cook meals and clean up after one’s self; they have rotating chore charts to clean up the entire room to engender a sense of fair group responsibility, so they don’t just clean up only after themselves, but once a month or so it’s their turn to ALSO clean the whole classroom top to bottom and take responsibility for the messes of others. It saves the school on a cleaning budget and creates a sense of responsibility to the school itself and the system of group cooperation in general, instead of encouraging hyper individuality as we do in the west. In Japan at least I know about, there’s so little violent crime and the transit system is so efficient that kids from a very young age take public transit, by themselves, to and from classes. It’s a really interesting difference in philosophy when it comes to actual life skills and preparedness, ON TOP of clobbering the US in terms of nearly every educational metric, like literacy, math, history, science knowledge levels, foreign language skills, general school attendance and standardized test scores. They’re doing something right in a lot of other places that the US will never ever adopt, I fear. We’re not so good at change.
I'm a boomer. I remember when our nation was #1 in all the things you mentioned. Our schools and colleges were the envy of foreigners. Public schools taught homemaking/sewing, woodwork, and auto mechanics.
Our education system took a dump when people wanted to be liberated from their traditional way of life. The family broke up, and the kids were left alone.
Morals took a hit as well. You can see how all of that has worked out for us.
Who is filming this?! Sharon?!🤣
Damn parents couldn't even tell her in person had a computer say it
I did it at five, so there! 😂
Completely soaking your shoes and then using a heated drier seems like a great way to make your shoes fall apart faster.
Yup so you buy more and more lol
"Trainers" back in my day we called em RUNNERS..
Tennies
My mum would be laughing. I didn't do any of this! 😂😂
Uh, so the stranger she met on the way home is doing the filming? 🤔
I love the organization. It makes my OCD say, yeah!!
I mean this was essentially me when I was a kid
Haoppens a lot in Japan. Kids also clean their school themselves
“ left the kid alone for a business trip surely no- what’s that!!!!?!?,??” Omg I’m dead 🖐🏼😭💀
Child & Maid all in one! 😂
"This is unheard of" The concern in his voice 😂😂
Children are like adults except they have much less life experiences 😮😮😮but if you teach them stuff they adapt and learn a lot quicker than adults ❤❤❤
Early and she is so smart
I can’t even get my 15 year old to wipe the counter down after lunch 😂
That house must be kept cool. She never took off her jacket.
WHY is this so surprising!? Me and my cousins were ALL doing similar things like this every single day!! My friends were doing it as well!! We all had responsibilities and respect for our elders and each other and Civic Duty. We did our homework and took care of our brothers and sisters or cousins and sometimes, if we were lucky, we got a little bit of change for the privilege!! Me personally, I took that money and spent a good bit of it on my brother's or on things I needed for school. Kids now don't have the drive to do that...🙄
Kids before the 90s could.
Mad Respect ❤️
Done On the regular basis. Children need training. 😊
The environment is very nice too
It's an asian thing and a Latino thing, I was this independent at 7. Did my own laundry, made my own breakfast, made my own bed. The only thing i didnt do on my own at that point was make dinner and transport myself.
Over there, that is the way they are taught
Your comments shows just how young you are 😊.
It's always been h^* of funny videos from your channel. ❤😅😂😊
I need all of this
That was like us GenXers lol I watched my brothers while my mom worked 2 jobs growing up from the age of 7/8 and up. It's all in how they're raised and their maturity.
Right! That’s a bit loud!😂😂😂
She is so sensible
Dang she good she better then I.
It's a culture thing. Whatever the family teach their young, Japanese children learn these responsibilities in school - all levels of school..
The OG post is from China, and the girl is Chinese btw
@@cubaku they still teach Japanese children to clean up after themselves in school.
@@FC-PeakVersatility I know, but it's very common for content from china to be twisted into "Korean" or "Japanese" trends because some people don't believe Chinese content is "aesthetic" enough like them while Chinese culture is mocked all the time.
With the casual sinophobia I see almost everywhere on the internet, I just want people to know that Chinese content isn't something to just laugh at. Sorry, I don't mean to sound defensive, it just irks me.
@@cubaku there’s nothing wrong with having a bit of national pride. I totally understand where you are coming from
"Hoovering" 😂 aint heard that one. SO DELIGHTFUL. 😂😂😂
This was me, too. Both parents worked, so I had to keep the house and watch my siblings, too.