Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Are you white American, OP?
I am East Asian, and in our culture it is expected that our children will not rebel in any visible way.
I am confused by your surprise. Or is this is a weird humblebrag? Your message is not getting across.
Me again. But also, you equate "creative and artsy" and non-athletic with being quirky? Where do you place classical musicians, then? Performing arts in general? Is my teen daughter non-conforming because she rides on horseback, likes to play violin and paint watercolors? Athletes mean squeaky clean to you?
You don't seem to know what you're talking about, honestly.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is a gen-z thing.
- New Balance shoes,
- Shop at TJ, Aldies, Lidl and Costco!!
- Wear hoodies/joggers mainly from Costco and other places. Three suits (blue, black, light gray) for weddings, blue/white/gray/pink/black shirts, many solid color ties.
- Haircuts from the mom and pop ethnic barber shops,
- Ok with thrifting (tools, pots and pans, garden equipment, golf club, party supplies),
- Always use apps when buying (even mcdonalds) that they can get freebies,
- First pay themselves - Roth, IRA, 401, Index funds etc,
- Hesitate to buy anything new.
- Balanced meals, drink a lot of warm beverages...
- But they will buy big slushie drinks
- Buy baked goods from Asian bakery
- Pack snacks when they are commuting to work for the car
- Have forbidden me to declutter and minimize anything before they can go through the hoard and then sell on FBMP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18 year old son is stereotypically masculine and straight & narrow, meaning no drinking or drugs, heterosexual, into cars & working out & his girlfriend. He’s already got the New Balance shoes but thankfully nowhere near a dad bod. How likely is this to change or will he just slide into being a suburban husband/dad after college? I feel like he’s 90 % there. Anyone else here with a son like this? He never really had an “experimental” phase of any sort.
What do you prefer? A frat bro hooking up with new girls every few months, riding motorcycle, getting tattooed, drinking and driving, experimenting with weed, vaping etc?
Anonymous wrote:18 year old son is stereotypically masculine and straight & narrow, meaning no drinking or drugs, heterosexual, into cars & working out & his girlfriend. He’s already got the New Balance shoes but thankfully nowhere near a dad bod. How likely is this to change or will he just slide into being a suburban husband/dad after college? I feel like he’s 90 % there. Anyone else here with a son like this? He never really had an “experimental” phase of any sort.
Anonymous wrote:
Are you white American, OP?
I am East Asian, and in our culture it is expected that our children will not rebel in any visible way.
I am confused by your surprise. Or is this is a weird humblebrag? Your message is not getting across.
Anonymous wrote:
Are you white American, OP?
I am East Asian, and in our culture it is expected that our children will not rebel in any visible way.
I am confused by your surprise. Or is this is a weird humblebrag? Your message is not getting across.
Anonymous wrote:
Are you white American, OP?
I am East Asian, and in our culture it is expected that our children will not rebel in any visible way.
I am confused by your surprise. Or is this is a weird humblebrag? Your message is not getting across.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:18 year old son is stereotypically masculine and straight & narrow, meaning no drinking or drugs, heterosexual, into cars & working out & his girlfriend. He’s already got the New Balance shoes but thankfully nowhere near a dad bod. How likely is this to change or will he just slide into being a suburban husband/dad after college? I feel like he’s 90 % there. Anyone else here with a son like this? He never really had an “experimental” phase of any sort.
Where do you live? My kid is kind of like that though plays a lot of golf and enjoys parties (but is an athlete so not drinking)...but neither he and none of his friends are into cars. We live in Bethesda and I would say none of us dads are into cars either as it's just not much of a thing anymore these days.
....In your area, you mean.
Plenty important in other areas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is exactly like that. Very odd as none of the rest of us are. We just try to love him for what he is, however boring that may be. The world needs a little weft to match the warp.
I think this says a lot. Most kids rebel against their parents and their strictures. If a parent is not strict and potentially out there, then the only way for a kid to rebel is to be the opposite.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a gen-z thing.
- New Balance shoes,
- Shop at TJ, Aldies, Lidl and Costco!!
- Wear hoodies/joggers mainly from Costco and other places. Three suits (blue, black, light gray) for weddings, blue/white/gray/pink/black shirts, many solid color ties.
- Haircuts from the mom and pop ethnic barber shops,
- Ok with thrifting (tools, pots and pans, garden equipment, golf club, party supplies),
- Always use apps when buying (even mcdonalds) that they can get freebies,
- First pay themselves - Roth, IRA, 401, Index funds etc,
- Hesitate to buy anything new.
- Balanced meals, drink a lot of warm beverages...
- But they will buy big slushie drinks
- Buy baked goods from Asian bakery
- Pack snacks when they are commuting to work for the car
- Have forbidden me to declutter and minimize anything before they can go through the hoard and then sell on FBMP.
Sounds a lot like my son (22). Frugal, focused on savings. His leisure time is hanging out with friends and girlfriend (sometimes bars but he thinks beer there is too expensive, sometimes board games), playing golf at a public course, fantasy football. We gave him money a couple birthdays ago to upgrade his clubs and he never got around to it because they are "fine." I doubt it since they are his grandfather's clubs and he's about 5 inches taller than grandpa was!