lol because it is far less rigorous. Chinese kids are in school and follow up tutoring classes for 12 hours a day, 6.5 days a week. There’s no comparison.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm an immigrant from Asia where this type of ask is pretty common. My parents bore the brunt of it. One of my cousins sent her son to a school near my parents, with the understanding that my parents would keep an eye on him. It did not go well. The son was very disrespectful and ungracious, whereas my mom went out of her way to do things for him. After that they said never again.
Short of truly dire situations (war zone or parental death), I would not take in a child of a relative. You can barely keep your head above water; you have no bandwidth to take on another dependent.
Relatives overseas often have some really unrealistic views of life in America. Do not give in to family pressure. It can get really insidious.
Not to hijack the OPs thread but I do not understand this. Everyone around here , particularly our Asian friends, thinks the US public education system is far less rigorous than schools in many Asian countries. Why is it a common ask to send cousins to live with someone else just to attend a US public school?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm an immigrant from Asia where this type of ask is pretty common. My parents bore the brunt of it. One of my cousins sent her son to a school near my parents, with the understanding that my parents would keep an eye on him. It did not go well. The son was very disrespectful and ungracious, whereas my mom went out of her way to do things for him. After that they said never again.
Short of truly dire situations (war zone or parental death), I would not take in a child of a relative. You can barely keep your head above water; you have no bandwidth to take on another dependent.
Relatives overseas often have some really unrealistic views of life in America. Do not give in to family pressure. It can get really insidious.
Anonymous wrote:I have a cousin who currently sends her older child to boarding school in the US. My cousin and her family live in a different country. She wants to send her younger child in the US but due to the economy and exchange rates, they cannot afford to send both kids to boarding school in the US. She asked if the younger child could stay with us and go to school.
I already have 3 kids and it a struggle daily to wake them up and I feel like we barely get to school. Same for the afternoons. We have constant conflicts and it is difficult to feed and drive my own 3 kids.
Would you take in a cousin?
+1Anonymous wrote:If its some type of emergency or in a war/disease/extremely impoverished area, then I probably would. Otherwise no, especially with your own kids to care for.
If they spend too much for their older child's education and can't fund a better education for their younger child, that isn't your economic problem to solve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm an immigrant from Asia where this type of ask is pretty common. My parents bore the brunt of it. One of my cousins sent her son to a school near my parents, with the understanding that my parents would keep an eye on him. It did not go well. The son was very disrespectful and ungracious, whereas my mom went out of her way to do things for him. After that they said never again.
Short of truly dire situations (war zone or parental death), I would not take in a child of a relative. You can barely keep your head above water; you have no bandwidth to take on another dependent.
Relatives overseas often have some really unrealistic views of life in America. Do not give in to family pressure. It can get really insidious.
Not to hijack the OPs thread but I do not understand this. Everyone around here , particularly our Asian friends, thinks the US public education system is far less rigorous than schools in many Asian countries. Why is it a common ask to send cousins to live with someone else just to attend a US public school?
Anonymous wrote:OP, I'm an immigrant from Asia where this type of ask is pretty common. My parents bore the brunt of it. One of my cousins sent her son to a school near my parents, with the understanding that my parents would keep an eye on him. It did not go well. The son was very disrespectful and ungracious, whereas my mom went out of her way to do things for him. After that they said never again.
Short of truly dire situations (war zone or parental death), I would not take in a child of a relative. You can barely keep your head above water; you have no bandwidth to take on another dependent.
Relatives overseas often have some really unrealistic views of life in America. Do not give in to family pressure. It can get really insidious.
Anonymous wrote:I have a cousin who currently sends her older child to boarding school in the US. My cousin and her family live in a different country. She wants to send her younger child in the US but due to the economy and exchange rates, they cannot afford to send both kids to boarding school in the US. She asked if the younger child could stay with us and go to school.
I already have 3 kids and it a struggle daily to wake them up and I feel like we barely get to school. Same for the afternoons. We have constant conflicts and it is difficult to feed and drive my own 3 kids.
Would you take in a cousin?