Anonymous wrote:As a parent, it absolutely boggles my mind that your kid has social anxiety that has reached the point that it's negatively impacting his ability to fully engage with and enjoy life - there are things he's interested in that are low stakes and he's too scared!! - and yet your primary concern is about... college admissions.
Help your kid address his anxiety so he can have a fun, engaging, rewarding experience now, in college (even if it's, horrors, a level or two down from where he possibly could go) and beyond.
And take a loooooong look at your priorities. No wonder your kid is anxious!
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, it absolutely boggles my mind that your kid has social anxiety that has reached the point that it's negatively impacting his ability to fully engage with and enjoy life - there are things he's interested in that are low stakes and he's too scared!! - and yet your primary concern is about... college admissions.
Help your kid address his anxiety so he can have a fun, engaging, rewarding experience now, in college (even if it's, horrors, a level or two down from where he possibly could go) and beyond.
And take a loooooong look at your priorities. No wonder your kid is anxious!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent, it absolutely boggles my mind that your kid has social anxiety that has reached the point that it's negatively impacting his ability to fully engage with and enjoy life - there are things he's interested in that are low stakes and he's too scared!! - and yet your primary concern is about... college admissions.
Help your kid address his anxiety so he can have a fun, engaging, rewarding experience now, in college (even if it's, horrors, a level or two down from where he possibly could go) and beyond.
And take a loooooong look at your priorities. No wonder your kid is anxious!
FWIW kids these days self-dx themselves all the time. What we used to feel was shyness/social cluelessness/awkwardness they call "social anxiety".
Okay. But this kid WANTS to start a club but won't because he's too scared. Whatever you call it, that's a problem!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a parent, it absolutely boggles my mind that your kid has social anxiety that has reached the point that it's negatively impacting his ability to fully engage with and enjoy life - there are things he's interested in that are low stakes and he's too scared!! - and yet your primary concern is about... college admissions.
Help your kid address his anxiety so he can have a fun, engaging, rewarding experience now, in college (even if it's, horrors, a level or two down from where he possibly could go) and beyond.
And take a loooooong look at your priorities. No wonder your kid is anxious!
FWIW kids these days self-dx themselves all the time. What we used to feel was shyness/social cluelessness/awkwardness they call "social anxiety".
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, it absolutely boggles my mind that your kid has social anxiety that has reached the point that it's negatively impacting his ability to fully engage with and enjoy life - there are things he's interested in that are low stakes and he's too scared!! - and yet your primary concern is about... college admissions.
Help your kid address his anxiety so he can have a fun, engaging, rewarding experience now, in college (even if it's, horrors, a level or two down from where he possibly could go) and beyond.
And take a loooooong look at your priorities. No wonder your kid is anxious!
Anonymous wrote:As a parent, it absolutely boggles my mind that your kid has social anxiety that has reached the point that it's negatively impacting his ability to fully engage with and enjoy life - there are things he's interested in that are low stakes and he's too scared!! - and yet your primary concern is about... college admissions.
Help your kid address his anxiety so he can have a fun, engaging, rewarding experience now, in college (even if it's, horrors, a level or two down from where he possibly could go) and beyond.
And take a loooooong look at your priorities. No wonder your kid is anxious!
Anonymous wrote:No big deal. He's in stuff and has good grades. Nothing magical about school clubs specifically.
Anonymous wrote:Wait, his extracurriculars are “strong”? It’s just school activities he won’t participate in? This is a non-issue. Leave him alone.
Anonymous wrote:He is a sophomore, so still an underclassman. It is hard for many boys still at this age socially with the upper classman boys around and this usually changes junior year. (I have 3 boys and my youngest is a sophomore and I have watched this play out multiple times with them and their friends) Good chance he changes/evolves next year. At least ask him to think about ones he might be interested in later.