Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on what the problems are and what you are looking for.
This. But generally I would say no. I found the late preschool and elementary years to be the sweet spot of family life. From about 5th grade on, there is much more social pressure on the kids, they develop attitudes and start fighting for independence. That isn’t to say they can’t also be lovely, but those ES years are hard to beat IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Boys are tougher in elementary with the nervous energy. By middle school, they mellow out and focus on academics or sports.
Girls on the other hand are the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, totally. I also hated elementary school. I felt like all DD wanted to talk about was toys made of cheap plastic from China, and couldn't tell a story coherently to save her life but loved talking. I kept working on her to gather her thoughts before launching into a story, to make sure it had a beginning, middle and end, and to give the who/what/where/when/why. Honestly I wondered if she was mentally impaired.
But by 6th grade she'd calmed down, could have a coherent conversation (this apparently never bothered her friends?) and could talk about things other than products. I've enjoyed her ever since.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, totally. I also hated elementary school. I felt like all DD wanted to talk about was toys made of cheap plastic from China, and couldn't tell a story coherently to save her life but loved talking. I kept working on her to gather her thoughts before launching into a story, to make sure it had a beginning, middle and end, and to give the who/what/where/when/why. Honestly I wondered if she was mentally impaired.
But by 6th grade she'd calmed down, could have a coherent conversation (this apparently never bothered her friends?) and could talk about things other than products. I've enjoyed her ever since.
Anonymous wrote:Looking back I think elementary years are the best. Seriously. MS is harder. The hormones kicking in and friends drama is real. I have 2 kids transitioning to HS next yr and the following and I'm not sure if it'll get easier. But so far girls have it harder than boys. MS is when sports also get more serious/frequent so I have turned into a professional driver as a second job even with carpools.
I say this with respect and good will - if you don't like elementary years or feel it's hard - you will hate the next few years of your life when all hell breaks lose on the hormones front. They won't be lovey and huggy and you will see lots of mood ups and downs and more activities and events in the social scene. More worries, more issues, more expensive all around. Good luck mom!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite so far has been the middle school age. I actually didn't like infant to preschool so much - I don't like structuring my day around sleep and eating schedules and always having to carry snacks, pants, etc. I do very much enjoy watching all my hard work materialize in a child who makes good decisions and surprises me everyday with the adult they are becoming (seriously I love MS). By HS they are SO independent they almost don't need me for anything more than advice here and there.
Wow this is maybe the first time I have ever heard this. While my own kids are lovely in MS, the friend drama and social pressures are enough to push me off a cliff.
Totally agree there are a lot of social pressures. I suppose we are a fairly low drama house when it comes to friends. I hear about some of it but it's not pervasive for us. BTW I have 3 girls 1 boy. I also spoke to my kids at length over many conversations about how people need to develop socially and everyone makes mistakes and some adults are stuck in this stage and have never fully developed. Maybe expecting the drama mitigated it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite so far has been the middle school age. I actually didn't like infant to preschool so much - I don't like structuring my day around sleep and eating schedules and always having to carry snacks, pants, etc. I do very much enjoy watching all my hard work materialize in a child who makes good decisions and surprises me everyday with the adult they are becoming (seriously I love MS). By HS they are SO independent they almost don't need me for anything more than advice here and there.
Wow this is maybe the first time I have ever heard this. While my own kids are lovely in MS, the friend drama and social pressures are enough to push me off a cliff.