Anonymous wrote:She probably didn’t know what an MSW was. This is not a big deal.
Also, why on earth would you need a top program for social work? There is huge demand for social workers and insufficient supply. Are there even top programs in social work? Also such a tough profession with a high burnout rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. You are reading A LOT into a single 3 letter word. As in, she said one word which IMO is pretty neutral and you have spent days replaying a 15 second conversation in your head dissecting tone, meaning, number of word spoken to each kid, etc. That is not normal. And it’s not how mentally stable people react.
You should respond by asking yourself why you feel so defensive and verklimptbabout your daughter’s career choice. And you should realize that the fact you haven’t let a *perceived* slight *by someone you just met* go after several days says a lot about you— none of it good.
This was an almost stranger making small talk. There is a 99% chance she could care less what your kid does with her life. She was in a social situation and neeed to say something. Why are you assuming the worst possible motives? And even if there was an intentional slight (which I seriously doubt), why do you care what some rando thinks?
But by all means, track down this person you barely know and demand an apology for a neutral word she probably doesn’t remember saying. If you want to seem crazy.
PS: I think getting an MSW does sound like FUN. Especially compared to a hardcore STEM degree. Abnormal Psych vs Multivariable Calc? I’d certainly take the abnormal psych.
Woah. Are you the person who said "fun?" If not, you're certainly making up a lot of detail that wasn't in OP's post.
Anonymous wrote:She probably didn’t know what an MSW was. This is not a big deal.
Also, why on earth would you need a top program for social work? There is huge demand for social workers and insufficient supply. Are there even top programs in social work? Also such a tough profession with a high burnout rate.
Anonymous wrote:“Not exactly, but she finds it very rewarding.”
Make the other person feel their rudeness immediately, without making a big deal about it. Then, like the PP said, let it go.
Anonymous wrote:It's nice that your kid isn't graduating with loans, but people who do social work don't earn much. Why don't you adapt my attitude which is to always assume the best in people, and figure she thinks being a social worker would be fun. It's so much more pleasant.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. You are reading A LOT into a single 3 letter word. As in, she said one word which IMO is pretty neutral and you have spent days replaying a 15 second conversation in your head dissecting tone, meaning, number of word spoken to each kid, etc. That is not normal. And it’s not how mentally stable people react.
You should respond by asking yourself why you feel so defensive and verklimptbabout your daughter’s career choice. And you should realize that the fact you haven’t let a *perceived* slight *by someone you just met* go after several days says a lot about you— none of it good.
This was an almost stranger making small talk. There is a 99% chance she could care less what your kid does with her life. She was in a social situation and neeed to say something. Why are you assuming the worst possible motives? And even if there was an intentional slight (which I seriously doubt), why do you care what some rando thinks?
But by all means, track down this person you barely know and demand an apology for a neutral word she probably doesn’t remember saying. If you want to seem crazy.
PS: I think getting an MSW does sound like FUN. Especially compared to a hardcore STEM degree. Abnormal Psych vs Multivariable Calc? I’d certainly take the abnormal psych.
Anonymous wrote:She didn’t know what else to say. It’s like when someone is telling a story and the other person responds with “that’s crazy!”
Conversation is a lost art. Don’t read too much into it, OP.