Well, I grant you that if a daycare worker started breastfeeding them or something, then I’d be worried :bigyikes: Mind you, until a little over a century ago there used to be such a thing as ‘wet nurses’ (of course these were women who’d just had children of their own) who were employed to do just that

Goes to show how parenting has its fashions and fads - often incomprehensible to later generations - like clothing or anything else.
** When a person bonds with a child they start to feel like they have a say in that child’s life. Might have been fine when most people shared simple morals. But with so much of society not agreeing with or being openly hostile to our Catholic faith, having someone like a daycare worker bond to my child could be dangerous. Kind of like teachers who go out and girls birth control or abortions without parental consent.
And having another woman breastfeed my baby would be beyond weird…but it doesn’t have to create a bond. I’m sure wet nurses felt more like milk cows than like secondary mothers

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Otherwise I dont think a child can have too much love or guidance, whether it’s from a good teacher or carer or a parent, grandparent or other family friend or relative. As long as the attitudes and morals of parents and other carers gel together, I don’t see a problem - takes a village and all that.
Of course a child cannot have too much love or guidance. But you make the point that the attitudes and morals of all involved should gel. How likely do you think that would be n a daycare or school situation?
But the whole schooling thing is interesting. What is it about, say, an 8-year-old child that makes it, in at least a substantial portion of cases, perfectly fine to put them in care for six or seven hours a day, whereas for a child that is really not that much younger it is, you would deem, largely inappropriate?
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It’s a blurry line that, for me, is mostly about individual circumstances. Some children are much more independent at a certain age than others. Some NEED their parents around for much longer than a typical child. Some families don’t have a choice about having both parents work.**
Does a school-age kid suddenly stop needing their parents, or suddenly become all grown-up-like? I just don’t see the rationale. If your child is ‘only a baby’ once, then they’re only eight once (or nine or ten) too … and only teenagers once, for that matter. A lot of parents would think that raising a teenager takes just as much work (mentally if not physically) as a baby or toddler.