Hahahahaha- hit a big ol’ nerve! Hilarious! |
+1 Way to be judgy and stereotype. No wonder - I would not let my kid hang around with kids who have parents who are so awful, popular or not. Look at your behavior! Wow. |
Unpopular kids are drinking, vaping and having sex too. |
| OP, you do you and stop keeping score. Everyone is going through something. It’s really not your business. You sound extremely naive. Stay in your own lane. And grow up. |
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I have one of those children.
I also have a child who died as an infant. I also have a child on the spectrum. So yes. We have upsetting parenting moments. |
I worry that you look at it as other people "suffering", OP. That does not sound normal. |
Damn right they are! I know this first hand. OP, where are you getting your information? You either need more reliable sources, or you need to MYOB, or both. Concentrate on your own family. |
What did I miss? what behavior, calling "popular" kids assholes? you seriously need a thicker skin. |
Ok so please respond to every anonymous question on an anonymous forum as myob. That’s really productive. Why even answer? Just myob back at ya! |
Lol, BS. My son plays sports. Within 30 seconds of being at his first varsity practice I could identify the filthy rich heartthrob of the school. My daughter is in all sorts of clubs. If we attend an event we can quickly identify the prettiest/wealthiest outgoing girls the other girls seem to gravitate towards. |
NP. Yes this is true. PP's "observation" is so far off of the mark. According to my HS junior, the popular kids generally go to parties every weekend, on a rotating basis. Parents look the other way. Unpopular kids still drink and smoke, but do so on the "down low". The unwanted pregnancy comment is just a straight up joke. Many HSers are having sex, even the unpopular. Some protected, some not. Abortion and plan B are popular options for all teens. Addition is purely genetic (duh) and doesn't matter if you are rich/poor, popular/nerdy. |
DS1 is popular. My grievances are the same as yours, except for DS2. It would be great if something "trickled down" to DS2, but no. I don't even think he will be admitted to DS1's middle school. It makes me want to rant and set the school on fire, but where we live there are not a ton of private options and public schools are a no-go. So I will quietly seethe...and stop donating money. It does influence how I parent DS1. I talk to him a lot about being inclusive and for parties and things he either has to invite his class or a much smaller subset of boys. But the truth is he has a lot of friends and doesn't get to spend time with them as much as he likes. He would be in big, huge, unbelievable trouble if I ever found out he was bullying someone, or telling someone they couldn't sit with him at lunch, but I don't control who he is genuinely friends with. I don't think he understands yet how different his brother is. I am protecting him somewhat because I don't want him to worry, but knowing may also make him a better human. I don't know. We'll probably have a heart a heart when he starts asking questions about why DS2 is not going to his school. DS2 has a couple friends now in elementary school who reciprocate, so he is Ok for another year or two. I have no idea what will happen to him in middle school, and it keeps me up at night. |
What do you care? Seriously. Why are you so preoccupied with this topic? Have your kids find friends that actually want him around. |
Honest question: why do you care so much what other kids are or are not doing? |
| Yes, they often end up alcoholics and drug addicts because they can never live up to the pressure. |