Home Cooked Stories
There's a movement spreading among millennial parents right now — a growing push to give kids a more 1990s childhood. Less screen time, more boredom, and unscheduled summers. And I get it. But this episode isn't about our kids. It's about us. Because we're the generation trying to protect our children from overstimulation while personally scrolling Instagram, prompting ChatGPT, and spending 20 minutes reading about baked chicken before we've even decided if we're making it. In this solo episode, I go back to 1995. I wanted to consider what weeknight cooking actually looked like for our parents and make the case that it was, in some real and meaningful ways, easier. Not because the tools were better; they weren't. But because the information field was so much smaller. Fewer decisions. Lower expectations. No ambient pressure that your Tuesday night pasta should be anything more than pasta. I also get into why that feels so hard to replicate now and what it's quietly doing to our self-trust when we keep looking outside ourselves for the answer. This one is for anyone who has ever spent 30 minutes researching a recipe and still didn't know what to make for dinner. Cozy on in. Resources mentioned in this episode: * The Melissa Ambrosini Show (Episode 693: Why Your Brain Feels Broken (And What It's Actually Trying to Tell You) [https://melissaambrosini.com/podcast/why-your-brain-feels-broken-and-what-its-actually-trying-to-tell-you/] Want more from Home Cooked Stories? Follow the show wherever you stream podcasts, so you never miss another one. Want to go deeper? I write about all of this — and everything else on my mind — over on Substack. Come join the conversation [https://homecookedstories.substack.com/] and get updates delivered straight to your inbox.
23 episodios
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