+1 My parents told me that all they expected of me was to contribute positively to the world. That resonated and I now I tell my children the same thing. I don't need them to get into top colleges and I don't need them to be the best at a particular sport or skill. I just want them to try to leave their environments a little better than they found it. That can be done on a small scale (making another kid feel valued) or a large scale (selecting a service profession). |
| I am teaching my daughter to think critically, to appreciate the positive, to look for the good in people, to set boundaries, to ask for help with small problems before they become big problems, find nice friends, have a good sense of humor, and be responsible with money. |
| Never change, dcum! |
+1. This is spot on. |
Wow! Excelling in kindergarten! Now that’s something to brag about. |
+2 This, right here. I think of it as investing in and protecting their mental health |
Exactly. Op is everything I hate about parenting. |
| Life is not a competition. We are working to ensure we create good people who contribute to society. |
| Modeling a happy marriage. Both DH and I grew up with unhappily married parents (his never divorced, mine did several times without finding happier marriages along the way). A happy marriage is the best foundation for a happy life. |
When public schools were closed, he learned to read. |
This, plus a stable home where all basic needs are met. |
| Mine will graduate from college debt free with a paid off used car. It’s all there is from that point |
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The best gift my parents ever gave me was the ability to walk out of undergrad debt-free so I would say saving for college is the biggest thing.
DH and I are also very involved in our community and show our kids how important it is to give back--I was PTA president, DH coaches sports teams, involved in the community association. It's very important to me that they understand that in order to live in a great community, you have to help create it. Another lesson that I learned from my parents. |
Eh, I don't agree with the bolded. Health insurance, having enough food, having a safe place to sleep, access to education - those are all more important and necessary in order to have a happy life. Your statement implies (probably unintentionally) that children raised by single parents can't grow up to have happy lives, and I'm sure you can agree that's not true. |
Well stop traffic! |