Anonymous wrote:The way you deal with this is to tell them that if he is getting all A's without breaking a sweat then the school isn't challenging his talents and he needs advancement or outside enrichment. If he is sweating for those A's then he deserves a reward.
Anonymous wrote:Her kid her business, do you have ASD OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care? That's not spoiling.
What do you mean that's not spoiling? She called me while she was out shopping with him on Saturday buying him this, than and the other because she's spoiling him for his grades. Those were her words to me. The most expensive item he wanted were some special basketball sneakers. They repeatedly bring up his A's to the rest of the extended family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care? That's not spoiling.
What do you mean that's not spoiling? She called me while she was out shopping with him on Saturday buying him this, than and the other because she's spoiling him for his grades. Those were her words to me. The most expensive item he wanted were some special basketball sneakers. They repeatedly bring up his A's to the rest of the extended family.
It’s always fun when the OP starts adding lots of details that we’re not in the original post when there’s pushback. Not your kid — not your business. DP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care? That's not spoiling.
What do you mean that's not spoiling? She called me while she was out shopping with him on Saturday buying him this, than and the other because she's spoiling him for his grades. Those were her words to me. The most expensive item he wanted were some special basketball sneakers. They repeatedly bring up his A's to the rest of the extended family.
It’s always fun when the OP starts adding lots of details that we’re not in the original post when there’s pushback. Not your kid — not your business. DP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care? That's not spoiling.
What do you mean that's not spoiling? She called me while she was out shopping with him on Saturday buying him this, than and the other because she's spoiling him for his grades. Those were her words to me. The most expensive item he wanted were some special basketball sneakers. They repeatedly bring up his A's to the rest of the extended family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get your concern, if it comes from a fear that this child is absorbing a warped sense of his own academic worth, which will set him up for a cruel awakening come college admissions.
You can casually drop into the conversation with his mother that your kids all had straight As, as did their friends, at that age, and it was expected of them. She won't like it, but your duty isn't to her... it's to your nephew. It's important for his long-term well-being that his mother becomes more realistic.
Both my kids had straight As in middle school, even the one with severe ADHD, ASD level 1, and low processing speed. So...
If you ever start wondering why people don’t like you, revisit this paragraph.
Letting low information family remain oblivious to systemic fraud like grade inflation makes you a much better person.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get your concern, if it comes from a fear that this child is absorbing a warped sense of his own academic worth, which will set him up for a cruel awakening come college admissions.
You can casually drop into the conversation with his mother that your kids all had straight As, as did their friends, at that age, and it was expected of them. She won't like it, but your duty isn't to her... it's to your nephew. It's important for his long-term well-being that his mother becomes more realistic.
Both my kids had straight As in middle school, even the one with severe ADHD, ASD level 1, and low processing speed. So...
If you ever start wondering why people don’t like you, revisit this paragraph.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get your concern, if it comes from a fear that this child is absorbing a warped sense of his own academic worth, which will set him up for a cruel awakening come college admissions.
You can casually drop into the conversation with his mother that your kids all had straight As, as did their friends, at that age, and it was expected of them. She won't like it, but your duty isn't to her... it's to your nephew. It's important for his long-term well-being that his mother becomes more realistic.
Both my kids had straight As in middle school, even the one with severe ADHD, ASD level 1, and low processing speed. So...
If you ever start wondering why people don’t like you, revisit this paragraph.
PP you replied to. People like me, because I have a soft voice and gentle manners, and when I say something true but a little tough to hear, it comes across in a loving way. Contrary to what you may think, most people are sensitive enough to detect sincerity and goodwill. I never criticize for the heck of it or because I enjoy inflicting pain.