Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a thing and I think it's pretty awful - for the boys and girls. So much added pressure on the boy to be "creative" when it's hard enough to ask a girl out. And the poor girl - what if she wants to say no and she's there in front of all these people in this big production being filmed for YouTube.
They are terrible.
Totally agree. My quiet, shy son wanted to ask a girl to Homecoming last year, and asked me to buy a dozen roses so he could give them to her when he asked. I was so on edge, hoping against hope she would say yes and not crush my son in front of everyone. Luckily, he found out before he asked her that she had already been asked by someone else. So he asked a different girl and she said yes. I would have been heartbroken for him if she had said no. Making it into a big deal is so unhealthy, IMO.
Whatever happened to simply asking someone? I can't believe the administration sometimes also helps out with planning these stupid proposals. I think schools should ban these things if they take place on school grounds.
These are the kids who grew up with reality shows. Everything has to be turned into a production.
I agree. If I was this age, I would not want the production. What if you want to say no? I think the boys that do this are the shady and showing off type. Not the ones I want my daughters hanging out with anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a thing and I think it's pretty awful - for the boys and girls. So much added pressure on the boy to be "creative" when it's hard enough to ask a girl out. And the poor girl - what if she wants to say no and she's there in front of all these people in this big production being filmed for YouTube.
They are terrible.
Totally agree. My quiet, shy son wanted to ask a girl to Homecoming last year, and asked me to buy a dozen roses so he could give them to her when he asked. I was so on edge, hoping against hope she would say yes and not crush my son in front of everyone. Luckily, he found out before he asked her that she had already been asked by someone else. So he asked a different girl and she said yes. I would have been heartbroken for him if she had said no. Making it into a big deal is so unhealthy, IMO.
Whatever happened to simply asking someone? I can't believe the administration sometimes also helps out with planning these stupid proposals. I think schools should ban these things if they take place on school grounds.
These are the kids who grew up with reality shows. Everything has to be turned into a production.
Anonymous wrote:It was definitely a thing in our DD's HS and other nearby schools. Prom is a bigger deal but Homecoming "asks" were pretty popular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a thing and I think it's pretty awful - for the boys and girls. So much added pressure on the boy to be "creative" when it's hard enough to ask a girl out. And the poor girl - what if she wants to say no and she's there in front of all these people in this big production being filmed for YouTube.
They are terrible.
Totally agree. My quiet, shy son wanted to ask a girl to Homecoming last year, and asked me to buy a dozen roses so he could give them to her when he asked. I was so on edge, hoping against hope she would say yes and not crush my son in front of everyone. Luckily, he found out before he asked her that she had already been asked by someone else. So he asked a different girl and she said yes. I would have been heartbroken for him if she had said no. Making it into a big deal is so unhealthy, IMO.
Whatever happened to simply asking someone? I can't believe the administration sometimes also helps out with planning these stupid proposals. I think schools should ban these things if they take place on school grounds.
Anonymous wrote:It's a thing and I think it's pretty awful - for the boys and girls. So much added pressure on the boy to be "creative" when it's hard enough to ask a girl out. And the poor girl - what if she wants to say no and she's there in front of all these people in this big production being filmed for YouTube.
They are terrible.