Anonymous wrote:Music lessons. I feel like piano is something one could enjoy for their entire life on a multitude of levels. As for sports, I feel like tennis is the most lifelong, financially accessible, enjoyable sport.
My kids wish we had had a dog but I know logistically and financially that was not something we could have done when they were small.
I also very much wish we had traveled more. But again, finances were the issue.
Anonymous wrote:Don't feel bad about the trampoline, OP. They are extremely dangerous and a liability to have, and they are really unsightly too. You had very good reasons not to buy one. Your kids can use them at friends' houses.
I kind of regret not letting my son do Boy Scouts, but only kind of. I know this won't be a popular opinion but my husband and I dislike the BSA organization (the hypocrisy of refusing to allow gay kids/leaders because it wasn't "morally straight," but meanwhile kids were being molested for decades by "morally straight" adults and it was covered up). I know they have cleaned up their act in recent years but we still don't trust them for safety or want to support them. They also expected a huge time commitment from families, which we didn't want to invest. But I know my son would have loved it, he is outdoorsy and athletic, and he's definitely given me guilt trips about it, especially now that he's older and sees his scout friends going on these cool trips. Maybe I should have just held my nose and sucked it up.
Anonymous wrote:I am looking at a bare spot in our yard where I should have put a trampoline for my kids. They begged for one, but I was always afraid that someone would get hurt. I also selfishly thought that it would ruin my garden. My neighbors have them and their kids are always out there bouncing around, laughing away. It seems almost therapeutic for them after school.
I also wish that I had put my son in organized sports earlier. He was not a natural, and earlier involvement in everything from skiing, to soccer would have been helpful.
I can't reel back time, but I can share this with those who have younger kids.
Anonymous wrote:I am looking at a bare spot in our yard where I should have put a trampoline for my kids. They begged for one, but I was always afraid that someone would get hurt. I also selfishly thought that it would ruin my garden. My neighbors have them and their kids are always out there bouncing around, laughing away. It seems almost therapeutic for them after school.
I also wish that I had put my son in organized sports earlier. He was not a natural, and earlier involvement in everything from skiing, to soccer would have been helpful.
I can't reel back time, but I can share this with those who have younger kids.
Anonymous wrote:I wish I had managed to take my kids on more trips and outdoor adventures when they were younger. We did do a lot, but that’s what I love, and what I was really eager to share with my children, but now my young teen both is less enthusiastic and has commitments to activities that make it hard to go away as much as I would like (and soon enough he’ll have summer jobs too). We did the best we could though given we had more limited funds and vacation days when they were younger,
Anonymous wrote:Don't feel bad about the trampoline, OP. They are extremely dangerous and a liability to have, and they are really unsightly too. You had very good reasons not to buy one. Your kids can use them at friends' houses.
I kind of regret not letting my son do Boy Scouts, but only kind of. I know this won't be a popular opinion but my husband and I dislike the BSA organization (the hypocrisy of refusing to allow gay kids/leaders because it wasn't "morally straight," but meanwhile kids were being molested for decades by "morally straight" adults and it was covered up). I know they have cleaned up their act in recent years but we still don't trust them for safety or want to support them. They also expected a huge time commitment from families, which we didn't want to invest. But I know my son would have loved it, he is outdoorsy and athletic, and he's definitely given me guilt trips about it, especially now that he's older and sees his scout friends going on these cool trips. Maybe I should have just held my nose and sucked it up.