Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience it’s taught, but not all teens can pull it off. Teens who can are usually old souls. She’ll blossom in the right college.
Taught how? My daughter is not shy, extremely involved and social at school — but if we recommended behaving this way she’d think we were insane. Our higher achieving daughter would seem cold and unappreciative in the exact same setting.
Anonymous wrote:Gathering last weekend for a colleague’s daughter. Normal looking and her mom has told me over the years she’s just a regular, average student and sort of shy, not terribly popular — not a boisterous type-A overachieving homecoming queen Elle Woods or anything.
Apparently she can turn it “on” for large gatherings because we were blown away how she worked the crowd of 300+ people coming and going, and when we left, she ran out to our car to personally thank us. Charming, warm, eye contact, quick little stories and then gracefully moved on.
I told her mom this week how lovely her daughter was and how she ran out to say bye and thank you to us. She said everyone was saying the same and that she made sure to personally do that for all 300+ guests!
I’m asking because I’m jealous. Our daughter is a great student and outgoing but absolutely nothing like that. Do parents actually teach their teens to behave this way and turn it “on” in a large gathering?
Anonymous wrote:What was the nature of the gathering? My usually shy daughter is like this but when she is in host or teacher mode, she acts like a charming, gregarious leader. It depends on whether she feels as if she's been "deputized" to do so based on her role at the event
Anonymous wrote:300 guests?
Anonymous wrote:Husband’s theory: Her outgoing parents hosted a lot of adult gatherings while their daughter was growing up. Kind of like Malcolm Gladwell’s book, the 10,000 hours of practice one. The somewhat shy daughter was getting those reps in, steeping in large gatherings makes you comfortable and you pick up social intelligence and get better and better at it. While our more outgoing daughter, and most teens in general, are rattled in such a setting. Outside of holidays once every few years, we never host large crowds at our home.
Anonymous wrote:Gathering last weekend for a colleague’s daughter. Normal looking and her mom has told me over the years she’s just a regular, average student and sort of shy, not terribly popular — not a boisterous type-A overachieving homecoming queen Elle Woods or anything.
Apparently she can turn it “on” for large gatherings because we were blown away how she worked the crowd of 300+ people coming and going, and when we left, she ran out to our car to personally thank us. Charming, warm, eye contact, quick little stories and then gracefully moved on.
I told her mom this week how lovely her daughter was and how she ran out to say bye and thank you to us. She said everyone was saying the same and that she made sure to personally do that for all 300+ guests!
I’m asking because I’m jealous. Our daughter is a great student and outgoing but absolutely nothing like that. Do parents actually teach their teens to behave this way and turn it “on” in a large gathering?