+1 I have 3 in HS and MS (with varying degrees of “popularity”) and agree with this. I haven’t heard any of them discussing other kids’ clothing etc in a negative way unless it something totally crazy and purposely attention seeking. Certainly nothing about brands etc. unless it is in a positive way. One of my kids is super popular and it doesn’t seem to be any different in her circle than in her sibling’s (not so popular) circle. It may be different at other schools- ours is a large UMC suburban public. |
I was talking about the Midwest which is often touted here as the "down to earth" less competitive place - I lived in the district and moved toe teh midwest and its not that different than the strivers everywhere else. I agree with you that ppl with millions are just as likely to be down to earth and normal people in the Washington area and some will have millions and in their circle of friends will be people who definitely dont if they send there kids to public schools. It used to be more economically mixed at the privates but that has changed. |
Its a pretty well known phenomenon: https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&sca_esv=592257846&rls=en&q=Zip+code+determines+success&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiooYOKjpyDAxV6rokEHb_dCB0Q1QJ6BAhHEAE&biw=1409&bih=735&dpr=2 |
haha so are nigerians! I'm half Indian/pakistani 2nd generation but our families can be a source of stress and competition more than a support or comfort. maybe I feel like this b/c my family was one of the early well settled ones who helped everyone else out but we get ZERO support or appreciation, nothing but expectations put on us. its VERY annoying and South asians are very very materialistic, toxic levels and and mostly ive seen that we are not very civic minded. I dont think looking at high wealth & success immigration communities is the way to go- b/c that is a self selecting group of people who loves money and success more than anything else- they will forego seeing their parents for 20,30 years to make money and both parents and kids are ok with this, its an acceptable price! More mixed income immigrant communities like Cubans or Italians or Filipino are better examples. |
It does feel like Indians and Persians are very competitive with one another and their friends and families. They take sibling rivalry and competitiveness to another level. |
Yah, but then you will enter the world at large with loads of brilliant people in it and have to compete, and isn’t it better if you learned how to? |
I grew up in NYC. I agree it is competitive but I don’t mind it. The world is full of mediocrity. If fierce competition is needed to carve out excellence, so be it. We all like exceptional doctors, chefs, musicians, and lawyers, don’t we? When is the last time you thought to yourself, well I’d better go to this mediocre surgeon because he seems happy and balanced? |
So the options are competitive or mediocre? |
I think NYC is perfect for some people and that likely is you/your personality, and there is nothing wrong with that. There’s a beauty to the pace and vibe of NYC. But I don’t buy that “fierce competition is needed to carve out excellence” - to me that’s a false premise, and why I left. |
I grew up in a very white, middle class suburb of Toledo, Ohio. I graduated from one of its public high schools. One of my classmates won a Pulitzer Prize. Another graduated from the local, third-tier university and her work is part of the permanent collection at The Guggenheim. A dozen or so of my classmates graduated from Harvard, Michigan, Dartmouth, Brandeis, Northwestern, Johns Hopkins, Duke, Notre Dame, Washington University in St. Louis, Yale and Cornell. Some of them became quite wealthy. Others are regularly interviewed by The NYTimes, CNN, etc for their expertise.
My husband has three degrees from Michigan. He also attended "good enough" public schools. Some of his like-minded peers from that district went to MIT and Harvard and became very wealthy entrepreneurs, surgeons and high-level executives at Fortune 500 corporations. The guy who edited the newspaper of the "shameful" third-tier university we attended also went on to win a Pulitzer. A guy who fixed the computers at the hospital I once worked at switched fields and went on to win an Oscar--he grew up middle class, graduated from a third-tier state school. The research assistant from rural Ohio who sat next to me at that same hospital is a self-taught visual artist whose work was recently featured in Vogue. What all of these people from rural and middle class communities in Ohio and Michigan have in common is deep engagement with a subject that became their area of professional expertise. It did not take a private school to produce those results. They were bright, self-motivated, competitive people who would have done well anywhere--provided resources were decent/good enough. If we had the extra money, I would still send my children to an expensive private. To me, it feels like insurance coverage. However, I am just not going to lose much sleep over the fact my children are in good public schools. |
This is a totally reasonable perspective, but not all minorities feel this way. I am one (Indian heritage) and I know Charlottesville’s demographics as well as anyone and would still love to live there. I can’t right now because my job isn’t conducive, but if I ever have the flexibility to, I’d seriously consider it. I grew up in a white community and went to mostly white schools and am completely fine with living in an area that is mostly white people. |
Asian American here. DH and I were both the token Asians growing up and we absolutely feel comfortable around all white people. I went to school in Boston. We live in NOVA now. We can get pho, dim sum, sushi, Thai anytime we want. I like being able to choose from multiple Asian grocery stores. If we moved to an area that was 99.9% white, I would not be able to choose between HMart, Lotte and 99 Ranch. I also like being able to go to Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s and Wegmens within a short drive from my house. My kids are totally Americanized and would fit in fine. I just prefer to be in an area with more minorities. This includes other people of color, not just Asians. |
Yes, indeed I would love to do it all again, ie, have a third baby. |
I'm a single mom raising a kid in Arlington 22207. We love the schools and our neighbors but it does take a psychological toll on me, being basically the poorest people in our neighborhood. (I make ok money, but nothing compared to the dual income families around us.) so if I did it all over again, I probably would have chosen a more middle class neighborhood. That said, she is getting a great education and has nice friends, and I will make a nice profit on my house when she goes to college. |
Boston suburbs have many math nerd towns. Massachusetts had the highest scores in the NAEP math scores. The state had the second highest NAEP reading scores with New Jersey being number one. Connecticut, New Hampshire and Vermont are also in the top ten. Vermont is super chill with excellent public schools and small class sizes. If only it wasn’t so cold |