• GlitchyDigiBun@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Unfortunately, you missed the point.

    The objective of Grimm fables is not to make kids feel good, nor to scare them, really. It’s to prepare them for the real world.

    Red Riding Hood is not a story about kids being eaten by wolves. It’s a story about teaching kids that there are adults in the world who want to harm them. Adults who will make themselves appear non-threatening in order to lure those kids into harm.

    What OOP implies here is that by removing elements of children’s stories that make us uncomfortable is exactly working against the morals and purpose of those stories.

    • mokus@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 days ago

      As an autistic child I never understood those dimensions of the story anyway. I am literally realizing them right now in my 40s upon reading your comment. Instead, I learned those life lessons because my parents told them to me directly.

      • GlitchyDigiBun@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Ah, same. My parents were neurodivergent and very blunt with life lessons, too. Neurotypicals have that kind of “beat around the bush” “don’t say the quiet part out loud” “guide them to water” type of attitude I think.

      • Øπ3ŕ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 days ago

        Good thing you weren’t born in that era, too. You would’ve been discarded/drowned/sold/cloistered/etc. as a witch like the rest of us NDs. 😅😶