added by sari and · updated 8mo ago
David Brooks: The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake - The Atlantic
- Ever since I started working on this article, a chart has been haunting me. It plots the percentage of people living alone in a country against that nation’s GDP. There’s a strong correlation. Nations where a fifth of the people live alone, like Denmark and Finland, are a lot richer than nations where almost no one lives alone, like the ones in Lat... See more
from David Brooks: The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake - The Atlantic by theatlantic.com
sari added 3y ago
- The return of multigenerational living arrangements is already changing the built landscape. A 2016 survey by a real-estate consulting firm found that 44 percent of home buyers were looking for a home that would accommodate their elderly parents, and 42 percent wanted one that would accommodate their returning adult children. Home builders have res... See more
from David Brooks: The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake - The Atlantic by theatlantic.com
sari added 3y ago
- For the privileged, this sort of works. The arrangement enables the affluent to dedicate more hours to work and email, unencumbered by family commitments. They can afford to hire people who will do the work that extended family used to do. But a lingering sadness lurks, an awareness that life is emotionally vacant when family and close friends aren... See more
from David Brooks: The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake - The Atlantic by theatlantic.com
sari added 3y ago
- When hyper-individualism kicked into gear in the 1960s, people experimented with new ways of living that embraced individualistic values. Today we are crawling out from the wreckage of that hyper-individualism—which left many families detached and unsupported—and people are experimenting with more connected ways of living, with new shapes and varie... See more
from David Brooks: The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake - The Atlantic by theatlantic.com
sari added 3y ago