Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard lots of people tell stories about how they or their children didn't turn 21 until halfway through their senior year, and how terrible it was to be left out and not be able to go out with their friends. However, whenever I tell people about how my son will be graduating this spring after 5 years while he had to watch all his friends graduate last spring, it gets brushed off by everyone, even those who simultaneously think that they or their kid had it rough by not being able to go to bars with their friends. I understand that there are much bigger problems in the world than social isolation. What I don't understand is why it's understandable to feel left out when your friends go to bars without you, but not when your friends graduate without you.
Who tf talks or thinks about any of this
This, and these days does anyone not turn 21 until halfway through senior year? Almost everyone should be 21 by September (although I understand there might be a few outliers that skipped a grade).
Plus these situations are entirely different. I knew lots of people in engineering majors that took longer than 4 years to graduate, and they didn’t seem upset about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard lots of people tell stories about how they or their children didn't turn 21 until halfway through their senior year, and how terrible it was to be left out and not be able to go out with their friends. However, whenever I tell people about how my son will be graduating this spring after 5 years while he had to watch all his friends graduate last spring, it gets brushed off by everyone, even those who simultaneously think that they or their kid had it rough by not being able to go to bars with their friends. I understand that there are much bigger problems in the world than social isolation. What I don't understand is why it's understandable to feel left out when your friends go to bars without you, but not when your friends graduate without you.
Who tf talks or thinks about any of this
Anonymous wrote:Neither situation needs an overload of sympathy.
Honestly, people these days are conditioned to complain and seek validation. They focus on the negative all the time. Op, I get you have some feelings about your kid graduating in 5 instead of 4. Your friends are not required to understand and validate you over and over again. Perhaps you can get a therapist to help you process it.
I know I sound cold in this post, I’m not usually a cold person, I’m just getting kind of fed up with everyone vocally focusing on negativity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your child is either in a 5 year program or was too lazy to graduate in 4. Either way it was their choice.
He signed up for a full load every semester, showed up to every class, and always turned in his assignments on time. He just didn't do well on the exams.
Literally anyone can sign up to a class, show up to a class, and turn in assignments on time. Failing exams suggests that he either wasn't working hard enough, or was not intelligent enough to be doing this course. Neither merits sympathy.
Enmeshed peopleAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard lots of people tell stories about how they or their children didn't turn 21 until halfway through their senior year, and how terrible it was to be left out and not be able to go out with their friends. However, whenever I tell people about how my son will be graduating this spring after 5 years while he had to watch all his friends graduate last spring, it gets brushed off by everyone, even those who simultaneously think that they or their kid had it rough by not being able to go to bars with their friends. I understand that there are much bigger problems in the world than social isolation. What I don't understand is why it's understandable to feel left out when your friends go to bars without you, but not when your friends graduate without you.
Who tf talks or thinks about any of this