Anonymous wrote:They don’t let you switch high schools for friend purposes anyway - you need some thing more valid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW my parents let me fend for myself. There were instances where their help would have been invaluable but I didn't get it. Sad, but it did make me more resilient.
Sounds like you do a lot for your kid (my parents would never have been thinking about any of this.) It's good and it's enough. Your kid's reaction tells me he will be okay in high school.
Thank you so much, PP!
I think I maybe grew up similar to you in that my parents were often clueless about how little things from them would have made a world of difference.
That’s why I may be overly hard on myself for similar things![]()
Fwiw he will have some people he knows at his HS. Just not his “friend group”.
This might be for the best. I'm trying to shake my 8th grader free from his "friend" group. There is so much disrespectful behavior to him that I'd love to see them in the rear view mirror with him starting fresh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW my parents let me fend for myself. There were instances where their help would have been invaluable but I didn't get it. Sad, but it did make me more resilient.
Sounds like you do a lot for your kid (my parents would never have been thinking about any of this.) It's good and it's enough. Your kid's reaction tells me he will be okay in high school.
Thank you so much, PP!
I think I maybe grew up similar to you in that my parents were often clueless about how little things from them would have made a world of difference.
That’s why I may be overly hard on myself for similar things![]()
Fwiw he will have some people he knows at his HS. Just not his “friend group”.
Anonymous wrote:My brother was like this. He struggled with basic planning and coordinating socially. As one example, he needed his parking pass application signed by the football coach and he kept putting it off/forgetting/who knows. Finally, his little sister, who was sick of taking the bus, matched up to the head football coach in front of 100+ football players and asked him to sign the form for her brother. It took all of 10 seconds and was done, but my brother would have *never* done it.
I'll say that these issues have persisted into adulthood and my brother still struggles with adulting. My mom thinks it's untreated anxiety. It's probably some of that, but I also think he comes off as a nice guy and all the women in his life (mom, sister, girlfriends, school secretaries) ended up stepping in and handling it for him so he never had to figure it out. Don't let that happen to your son. Make him schedule his own dentist and doctor appointments, take his own car to have the oil changed, call to ask for an exception to request a transfer, do his own laundry, etc.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW my parents let me fend for myself. There were instances where their help would have been invaluable but I didn't get it. Sad, but it did make me more resilient.
Sounds like you do a lot for your kid (my parents would never have been thinking about any of this.) It's good and it's enough. Your kid's reaction tells me he will be okay in high school.