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My oldest has special needs. We have stayed on in this country, visa after visa (and now green card) to give him the best chance at a professional launch. Our home country would not have offered him the services and accommodation he needed in school, and doesn't even have the medications he needs to take!!! It's been years of visa applications, lawyer fees, uncertainty surrounding whether we can stay or leave, stress and marital tension, so that our son has opportunities. |
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| have fun, be happy, don't worry about money, what others have etc, your happiness will drive your success. which is not determined by private schools, fancy hoses or cars. |
| The OP, mother to one seven year old, has it all figured out. |
Dp. Of course kids of single parents are happy and successful. The question was what do you do to give your kid the best chances at success. Pp and I both apparently agree that being raised in a home with two parents who love each other will contribute to the child's happiness and success in life. Having grown up in a house with infidelity, disappearing and reappearing father and general chaos and dysfunction led me to believe that parents should be loving, faithful and happy to raise kids well. Dh grew up with horrible fighting between his parents. Being faithful, loving each other and sticking together through challenges is a choice..and one which isn't always easy to do. |
Whoa! Something no other child has ever learned to do! *clap clap* |
| As the mom of adult kids, I'm embarrassed for you, OP. Your child is still a baby. Are you seriously talking about excelling in Kindergarten? Because that's just fukced up. Trust your kids to find their own path. Of course you provide guidance and resources along with way. But your definition of "successful" might not (is likely not) the same as theirs will be. Allow them to become who they were meant to be and not who you want them to be. |
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Enabling opportunities for them to try/explore different interests whether its sports, life skills (art, cooking, glass blowing), social organizations (scouts, cultural), etc.
I book experiences and trips throughout the year instead of buying stuff. We visit farms during the different seasons to pick our own food. During our summer vacation this year we will go rafting, hiking, and visit local museums. We go skiing every year in different places. I encourage them to volunteer for causes important to them, emphasize working hard and doing well in school and get extra help if they need it, learning life skills (communicating, getting a job, doing laundry, cleaning, cooking, yard work, paying bills), guide them in learning what it means to a "good" friend/sibling/spouse/child/employee/human. |
| I taught her how to avoid people like OP. |
Life is absolutely a competition though. Nearly everything worth having is competitive to obtain. |
| I gave my child a good education, a stable home with family dinners five days a week, white skin, and a penis. If that’s not enough, that’s on him. |
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what is it with the pushy moms on here lately.
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+1. If you think that life is a competition, and you are winning, everyone else thinks you are an a**hole. |
| Life is long and you get many chances if you work for it and have a safety net. DH was not particularly a star performer in school or in his early career. Now he is. |
You're confused. I'm saying that my children, AS SPOUSES, will have the best chance at a happy life if they are happily married. |