I don't think I'm watching TV shows, I'm watching America.
In 1989, Sheldon was 9 years old and the family lived in the small town of Medford, Texas.
His father is a football coach in a public high school, and his mother is a housewife. He has an older brother who is a freshman in high school and a younger sister who is in elementary school.
In the plot, it was revealed that their family's economic situation was not good. After all, my father had to support five people by himself.
But it didn't affect them to live a relatively decent life. The family has a big house, two cars, a TV, a front-loading washing machine, a backyard, a barn, and consumes a lot of beef every year.
This refreshed my view of the poor economic situation. Living in poverty should not mean going to the street to pick up some junk and stuff it under the bed.
I'm wondering if my standard of living is not what it was in America 30 years ago.
The other is the concept of the American family being neatly together.
Who told me that Americans have a particularly weak concept of family, and they all take care of themselves?
I used to believe this, but my observations when I went abroad were subversive.
It seems that Americans often have family gatherings at home on weekends, and they go out to travel to help the elderly and the young.
The most touching thing in "Little Sheldon" should be the warmth between families.
The family did everything together. Dad drove Sheldon for more than ten hours to Houston to find a NASA expert for evaluation. The whole family sat in the car neatly.
Family is to accompany each other.
Then there is the education of children.
From the TV show, Americans seem to pay more attention to the development of nature than to good or bad grades.
Sheldon's mother often told his father that he should pay attention to how to communicate with the child, and that the child needs the father's influence in the process of growth.
They are committed to cultivating a three-dimensional, physically and mentally healthy child, and Asians are more pursuing their children's good grades, so European and American children look more sunny.
And what kind of family produces what kind of children.
Children with happy families tend to have little heart and are not good at intrigue.
Pushing such a child into a palace fighting drama is like throwing a little white rabbit on the African savannah to walk with lions and leopards.
Sheldon is a well-protected kid.
In short, "Little Sheldon" and "The Big Bang Theory" are well connected. If the latter makes you laugh, the former is often a knowing smile.
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