Belonging Needs: Family


Although the "Mom and apple pie" stereotype of domestic pleasures is an exaggeration, it does suggest some of the most important human desires for love and bonding, nurturing and caring within the family.

This public image of family life is highly idealized: happy, co-operative people with solvable problems.

But, in reality, many families have more difficult problems: debts, divorce, hostility, child abuse, neglect, sickness, and neurotic behaviors.

Thus, when people see the idealized family in ads, we envy the illusion, desire the dream.

Factory-made, mass-produced items often seek to associated with "home made" qualities. For example, convenience foods (frozen foods, microwave dinners) are "home style" or "tastes like home cooking."

Fast food restaurants ("bring the family"), replacing home cooking, run ads to give permission to people (especially overworked women in two-worker families) feeling guilty about eating out.

Other products promise benefits both for the family and the buyer (in the role of provider, or caretaker): "You'll be a better mother, if you'll buy this for your family."

 


Audience-centered ads try to associate the product with pleasant emotional feelings of "good things" already liked by the intended audience. Such feel- good ads are often not logical or true, but can be very effective.

 

 

Key Words:


care, caretaker, caring
domestic
down home
family, family style
fireside
hearth
home, home grown
home made, home maker, home spun
hospitality
kitchen
nurture
protect
responsible
serene, serenity
share, sharing
together, togetherness tranquil

Family relationship words:

Mother, Mom, Ma
Father, Dad, Pa,
children, kids
son, daughter
Grandma, Grandpa
aunt, auntie, uncle.
Nicknames, diminutives:


Bits, Lizzie, Chris, Kit, Jimmy-Jon, Jim, Davy, Maggie, Bobby, Ellie, Han, Duke
,

 


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