Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had to share this from a different thread for all parents out there dealing with other difficult, entitled parents at school, sports and after school activities-hope it reaches those it needs to reach:
Folks, you have to let your children experience disappointment and adversity when they are young or they will not be equipped to handle stress and disappointment when the are older. Somehow we have come to equate good parenting with shielding our children from every disappointment and created a culture where every one gets a trophy, everyone brings home a gift from a party (i.e., goody bag). We are setting our kids up for failure, depression, and becoming lousy adults in general.
Exactly. Instead, these type A parents would rather game the system and set their kid up for further disappointment. Because they care more about bragging in the carpool lane, they threaten litigation and use every trick in the book to squeeze their kid into an already overcrowded AAP system.
OP here-I wasn't talking about gaming the system for AAP admittance, but rather about parents letting their kids have disappointments in sports, activities, etc. Life doesn't always go as planned, and I feel like kids around here just don't get reality. Not trying to take a shot at AAP.
Anonymous wrote:Had to share this from a different thread for all parents out there dealing with other difficult, entitled parents at school, sports and after school activities-hope it reaches those it needs to reach:
Folks, you have to let your children experience disappointment and adversity when they are young or they will not be equipped to handle stress and disappointment when the are older. Somehow we have come to equate good parenting with shielding our children from every disappointment and created a culture where every one gets a trophy, everyone brings home a gift from a party (i.e., goody bag). We are setting our kids up for failure, depression, and becoming lousy adults in general.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had to share this from a different thread for all parents out there dealing with other difficult, entitled parents at school, sports and after school activities-hope it reaches those it needs to reach:
Folks, you have to let your children experience disappointment and adversity when they are young or they will not be equipped to handle stress and disappointment when the are older. Somehow we have come to equate good parenting with shielding our children from every disappointment and created a culture where every one gets a trophy, everyone brings home a gift from a party (i.e., goody bag). We are setting our kids up for failure, depression, and becoming lousy adults in general.
Exactly. Instead, these type A parents would rather game the system and set their kid up for further disappointment. Because they care more about bragging in the carpool lane, they threaten litigation and use every trick in the book to squeeze their kid into an already overcrowded AAP system.
OP here-I wasn't talking about gaming the system for AAP admittance, but rather about parents letting their kids have disappointments in sports, activities, etc. Life doesn't always go as planned, and I feel like kids around here just don't get reality. Not trying to take a shot at AAP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had to share this from a different thread for all parents out there dealing with other difficult, entitled parents at school, sports and after school activities-hope it reaches those it needs to reach:
Folks, you have to let your children experience disappointment and adversity when they are young or they will not be equipped to handle stress and disappointment when the are older. Somehow we have come to equate good parenting with shielding our children from every disappointment and created a culture where every one gets a trophy, everyone brings home a gift from a party (i.e., goody bag). We are setting our kids up for failure, depression, and becoming lousy adults in general.
Exactly. Instead, these type A parents would rather game the system and set their kid up for further disappointment. Because they care more about bragging in the carpool lane, they threaten litigation and use every trick in the book to squeeze their kid into an already overcrowded AAP system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had to share this from a different thread for all parents out there dealing with other difficult, entitled parents at school, sports and after school activities-hope it reaches those it needs to reach:
Folks, you have to let your children experience disappointment and adversity when they are young or they will not be equipped to handle stress and disappointment when the are older. Somehow we have come to equate good parenting with shielding our children from every disappointment and created a culture where every one gets a trophy, everyone brings home a gift from a party (i.e., goody bag). We are setting our kids up for failure, depression, and becoming lousy adults in general.
Exactly. Instead, these type A parents would rather game the system and set their kid up for further disappointment. Because they care more about bragging in the carpool lane, they threaten litigation and use every trick in the book to squeeze their kid into an already overcrowded AAP system.
Anonymous wrote:Had to share this from a different thread for all parents out there dealing with other difficult, entitled parents at school, sports and after school activities-hope it reaches those it needs to reach:
Folks, you have to let your children experience disappointment and adversity when they are young or they will not be equipped to handle stress and disappointment when the are older. Somehow we have come to equate good parenting with shielding our children from every disappointment and created a culture where every one gets a trophy, everyone brings home a gift from a party (i.e., goody bag). We are setting our kids up for failure, depression, and becoming lousy adults in general.
Anonymous wrote:Had to share this from a different thread for all parents out there dealing with other difficult, entitled parents at school, sports and after school activities-hope it reaches those it needs to reach:
Folks, you have to let your children experience disappointment and adversity when they are young or they will not be equipped to handle stress and disappointment when the are older. Somehow we have come to equate good parenting with shielding our children from every disappointment and created a culture where every one gets a trophy, everyone brings home a gift from a party (i.e., goody bag). We are setting our kids up for failure, depression, and becoming lousy adults in general.