J
JMJ_Theresa
Guest
I am not a historian, but I think this would be an interesting discussion. I heard a Legionary priest say that the generation that grew up in the Great Depression were traumatized by, well, be on the brink of starvation. Then, just as it was ending, the young men of the era were further traumatized by WWII. When they returned from war, they were determined that their families would never suffer depravation and therefore worked themselves to death. Because of their absence from the home, their children grew up with an excessive identification with feminine nature (moms there, dads gone) and that has led to the lack of balance in subsequent generations. In other words, men did not know how to be men. A stretch?
Was it the Great Depression? WWII? Maybe the roots are in the industrial age, when families didn’t work together anymore–the men went off to the factories.?
Was it the Great Depression? WWII? Maybe the roots are in the industrial age, when families didn’t work together anymore–the men went off to the factories.?