Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:- " These are some of the most fun and memory making years in life! "
You wrote that, OP. I can't believe you did. Makes you look so stupid and shallow.
To many people, high school isn't anything special compared to other experiences. You are very wrong to believe that senior year of high school is the be-all, end-all.
If you peaked as a senior in high school, and lived your best life then... I mean, you agree that it's sad, and a reflection on you, right?
All stages of life have fun and memorable experiences. Please don't stuff your senior's head full of regret and disappointment. Work on yourself. You sorely need it.
Say what you want, but older people will often tell a lot of stories from their HS days. A lot more than the stories that they have from when they were 41-42.
The only old people I know who do that didn't go to college and had kids right out of high school.
They're reminiscing because the loss is significant compared to the immediate ramifications of parenthood at a young age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's like dismissing someone's miscarriage by saying it wasn't a real baby, or dismissing sadness over a house burning down by saying that the person is too materialistic. Losing something that is important to you sucks. Kids don't have the experience to understand that there will be many more highlights to come.
I can't believe you would compare senior year fun to a baby or a house. And it is absolutely your job to teach your kids to take disappointments in stride, make the most of the present, and look forward to the future.
It is a parent's job to encourage kids to take disappointments in stride. It is not the a parent's job to tell a child their feelings don't matter. In fact, failing to acknowledge feelings of loss undermines the resiliency we are trying to foster. It doesn't matter if you hated high school, don't remember senior year, or remember senior year as the worst year of your life. If OP's DD was looking forward to it and is upset about losing the experience she expected, it is perfectly fine to let her experience that sense of loss before reframing the year in the most positive light. And the same is true of OP's feeling of loss for her daughter. She has a right to feel that way - this situation sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's like dismissing someone's miscarriage by saying it wasn't a real baby, or dismissing sadness over a house burning down by saying that the person is too materialistic. Losing something that is important to you sucks. Kids don't have the experience to understand that there will be many more highlights to come.
I can't believe you would compare senior year fun to a baby or a house. And it is absolutely your job to teach your kids to take disappointments in stride, make the most of the present, and look forward to the future.
It is a parent's job to encourage kids to take disappointments in stride. It is not the a parent's job to tell a child their feelings don't matter. In fact, failing to acknowledge feelings of loss undermines the resiliency we are trying to foster. It doesn't matter if you hated high school, don't remember senior year, or remember senior year as the worst year of your life. If OP's DD was looking forward to it and is upset about losing the experience she expected, it is perfectly fine to let her experience that sense of loss before reframing the year in the most positive light. And the same is true of OP's feeling of loss for her daughter. She has a right to feel that way - this situation sucks.
Anonymous wrote:There are people who peak in high school. I can see how a distanced senior year would be devastating for them. But for everyone else? There’s college, grad school and all of your 20’s for all sorts of youthful adventures. High school is just a gateway to the good stuff!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's like dismissing someone's miscarriage by saying it wasn't a real baby, or dismissing sadness over a house burning down by saying that the person is too materialistic. Losing something that is important to you sucks. Kids don't have the experience to understand that there will be many more highlights to come.
I can't believe you would compare senior year fun to a baby or a house. And it is absolutely your job to teach your kids to take disappointments in stride, make the most of the present, and look forward to the future.
Anonymous wrote:Don't think seniors are the only ones facing a loss here.
COVID has given my kids the gift of missing out on the nightmare that is middle school. While a miserable experience, those middle school social mishaps are what shape people into adults and teach them boundaries. lots of special snowflakes are going to emerge on the other side of this, and this generation will end up with even less social skills than they already have.