| My 11 year old DD also mentions 'popular' girls. I do think it's a thing and she does not seem to care very much either, though the way she mentions them makes me think she thinks it's a good or powerful thing to be popular. |
I did wow myself. That was my first sentence. I don't know which school your DD goes to, maybe you need to change your child's school? In my DD's circle of friends, now in HS, she knows exactly who are promiscuous girls, and most of them are not popular, just the opposite, kids who you would think are best behaved, quiet and then there is a video of them posted. There have been numerous incidents like this just last year. I was plain stunned when my DD told me which kids were those. These are things that a parent like you needs to start thinking about. These kids are doing this for attention. When I ask my DD is there are popular kids at her school, she says that there are many groups of kids and that nobody is that popular, but maybe popular in their friend group. |
From OP - you are awesome. Thank you for this post. To many other PPs - seems I have struck a popularity nerve among Moms, yikes. |
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I grew up in this area and went to private schools.
The popular kids did not crash and burn as adults and those who were popular in school ended up being just as "popular" in adult life and very successful. My social media is filled with those people's accomplishments. They aren't even braggy about it. The popular kids were involved in sports, were leads in play, heads of clubs, partied on weekends. Almost none ended up junkies or alcoholics. Their parents were present in their lives as well. I will go out on a limb and say this is likely still the case today in private schools and other mainly upper SES public schools in our area Looking back, I think being popular helped them shore up and establish social skills that were needed for life long success. They got to practice and establish these skills needed for networking, negotiation and just general socializing long before needed and long before they even knew that they would need them. I often wonder now how much social engineering was taking place behind the scenes that involved parents. My own mom and dad were not into the social scene so I can't know for sure but I don't doubt that the same social engineering and hovering was going on 20 yrs ago. And I bet those parents learned it from their own parents. So today, when I see parents who are successful - high SES, high status jobs, trying to social engineer their young child's lives, I do wonder if they are not on to something and that is part of the cycle of upward mobility. |
this was me in HS, which in retrospect really was perfect but my girlfriends and I were still all pretty self conscious in our own ways about something, so I think that is often just the age. I did desperately wish any of my crushes could see me as someone other than a friend though- which again in retrospect, the ones with the closest ties that lasted are not the ones that had long term BF/GF relationships draining their time. I would love it if my kids didn't bother with that shit until senior year |
| At my daughter's school (she's in 9th grade), popular refers to anyone to is well-liked, not afraid to speak up, participates in activities (my daughter is in marching band), and has a large group of friends. The girls who are "slutty" are NOT popular. They are the ones the other kids stay away from, especially since some of them at her school seem to have a pregnancy pact going on. So all schools are different, I assume. She is considered popular at her school. My other daughter was not, got mixed up with a bad crowd, so I sent her to live with her dad in Oklahoma, where the school has only 80 students in grades 9-12. The one my younger daughter is at has around 600 students in the same grades. My older daughter is still not popular, but I don't care because she is doing much better and is no longer around that bad crowd of kids. Popular isn't as important as safe and happy, IMO. |
Totally agree with you. Popular is well-liked (or admired). The slutty crowd is that -- the slutty crowd. There may be some popular kids in that crowd and more that are not. Popular is a stupid term and very meaningless in 10 years after HS. Happy is way more important. But that being said, there are a lot of posters on this thread whose kids are NOT popular, and they care quite a bit and are are making accusations that the popular crowd is mean, slutty, druggy, whatever. Worry about your kid being happy and fitting in whatever group they are comfortable in but don't put down the "popular" crowd to them --"you don't want to be in that group anyway because they are mean and slutty" It is not a good lesson. Focus on their own positives not the negatives of a group that they might envy in some way, it is not a habit that will serve them well in the future. They need to be comfortable in their skin from the inside. |