Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not a parent so feel free to ignore my advice. However, I think it's good that he's failing now at age 14, rather than age 25. Right now it doesn't really matter if he fails once or twice, and hopefully he'll soon realize that hard work doesn't beat talent if talent doesn't work hard.
This most recent failure he immediately said to me I'm going to be practicing after school with X friend who also didn't make it to get better together. So I'm super happy at his response - work harder, get better. He also could tell me the concrete ways in which he didn't do as well as others.
Anonymous wrote:Just keep telling yourself they build resilience.
Those aren't big failures, OP. I have a child with special needs and a gifted child. The one with SN nearly failed birth! And then failed on the regular after that. Intensive therapies, medications, tutoring, executive coaching later, and he's safely ensconced in a university. It's nothing short of miraculous, really.
He has a lot more mental resilience that his gifted sibling, who has had very minor fails, and goes through life winning without even trying. I worry about her. The day she fails massively (and she will, everyone does), she risks falling apart. My son fails, and he just shrugs and keeps going. It's happened so often that he knows how to handle himself.
If you say your child's executive function is weak, you might want to get him tested for ADHD. It's not just something you power through. He might need meds and/or behavioral modification and/or executive function training to address those issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not a parent so feel free to ignore my advice. However, I think it's good that he's failing now at age 14, rather than age 25. Right now it doesn't really matter if he fails once or twice, and hopefully he'll soon realize that hard work doesn't beat talent if talent doesn't work hard.
This most recent failure he immediately said to me I'm going to be practicing after school with X friend who also didn't make it to get better together. So I'm super happy at his response - work harder, get better. He also could tell me the concrete ways in which he didn't do as well as others.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not a parent so feel free to ignore my advice. However, I think it's good that he's failing now at age 14, rather than age 25. Right now it doesn't really matter if he fails once or twice, and hopefully he'll soon realize that hard work doesn't beat talent if talent doesn't work hard.