6 comments

  • jemmyw37 days ago
    I&#x27;ve always loved the books. I grew up near Ashdown forest. When I visited the UK again I stayed in Hartfield and went to the little cafe they mention in the article. It was nice, my kids enjoyed it.<p>I was reminded this year that my Winnie the Pooh is not everyones when someone at work posted a quote that made no sense to me. I read some of the poems Milne wrote, thinking it must be from those. Of course it was just from a more recent Disney movie. It was about being smarter than you think, it made me chuckle anyway because quite a few of the original stories are about what happens when you think you&#x27;re smart. Milne might not have the best reputation as a good bloke, but his writing about childhood was subtle and grounded.
  • fallinditch37 days ago
    For anyone with young children I highly recommend reading them Winnie-the-Pooh for bedtime stories - much fun!
  • vitaelabitur37 days ago
    <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=ba5HllbvLf4" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=ba5HllbvLf4</a>, The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh (1977) Ending<p>I was a quiet kid. Books, shows, and films shaped my sensibilities and moral tastes.<p>I wonder if that remains possible today. Content designed solely for the dopamine hit seems to crowd out everything else.
    • conception37 days ago
      There is a lot of recent kids programming that’s pretty amazing - Stillwater, Wolf Boy, Pinecone and Pony
      • vitaelabitur37 days ago
        That might be the case. Maybe I am writing from a place of nostalgia and subconscious declinism.
        • conception37 days ago
          Admittedly there is also a lot of paw patrol. I think it’s more the good stuff (rightly) doesn’t tend to have giant toy lines associated with it at Target etc.
    • Telemakhos37 days ago
      &gt; I wonder if that remains possible today.<p>Parents still have the ability to raise their children according to their own values, despite the most earnest and eager intentions of the dopamine-dealing crowd. That bug hasn&#x27;t yet been engineered out of society.
      • vitaelabitur37 days ago
        You are right, parents can still steer their children.<p>But in some cases like mine, parents might not have the time or inclination to do so, for whatever reasons.<p>I was able to discover Pickwick Papers, Hardy Boys, Harry Potter, Lord of the Flies, Spirited Away, Almost Famous, etc. on my own. If I were young today, I don&#x27;t think I would discover the right things.
      • RattlesnakeJake37 days ago
        Yet when we do this by, say, homeschooling, the HN commentariat piles up hundreds of comments accusing us of child neglect and a lack of concern for society.
        • jemmyw37 days ago
          Do they? I&#x27;ve mentioned homeschooling on hn before without issue. There&#x27;s always knobs who can&#x27;t have a nuanced view of course, but generally the discussions I&#x27;ve seen have tended positive.
          • SauntSolaire37 days ago
            This[1] thread has a good collection of them. Has plenty of comments in favor of course, but the negative ones are present in high quantities. There&#x27;s a reason even anodyne headlines like that can get 800+ comments on HN.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=45999842" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=45999842</a>
            • jemmyw37 days ago
              I missed that one. But it seems like a lively debate for the most part rather than a single opinion pile on.<p>But yeah I get your point that it&#x27;s like there&#x27;s an unreasonable number of people who have a strong opinion on it despite having no actual experience or evidence or reason to comment. Homeschool is a small minority and the majority are biased to what they know. We homeschool 3 kids, didn&#x27;t intend to to it before it happened, and I would have held some very incorrect opinions about it too, for what little thought I ever actually gave it.
            • RattlesnakeJake37 days ago
              Yeah, that&#x27;s the one that came to mind.<p>I was surprised at how much negativity surrounded the topic, despite what feels like a general dissatisfaction with the public schools at this time.
  • Throaway19871237 days ago
    As a Winnipegger, all I can say is im proud of the silly ol bear.
  • greatgib37 days ago
    Regarding the context with Taiwan, at first I thought that the news was about the Chinese dictator!
  • nephihaha37 days ago
    The original bridge where Milne and his son Christopher Robin created the game Pooh sticks became worn and unsafe in the late 1990s.<p>It was dismantled and replaced with a replica which is still in place in Ashdown Forest.<p>The original structure sold at auction in 2021 for £131,000.
    • privong37 days ago
      Why copy and paste text from the article without adding any commentary?
      • nephihaha37 days ago
        What do want me to say? People travel to the fake bridge or someone bought a rotting one for a hundred thousand?