Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boys who wear shorts or no coats to school in the winter are sometimes defying their parents. I teach a particular skill after school and I see this all of the time.
I ask these numbskulls what they are thinking of and they always say, "I don't get cold".
Yet if there was a fire or bomb scare at their school and they had to stand outside for three hours their parents would be the first to whine that the school didn't provide a warm place for their darlings to stay.
Parents! If you see your boys trying to get out of the house with shorts or with no coat when its 25 degrees ORDER them to change clothing.
Get over yourself.
If my DS gets ME to wear shorts in the winter, he is ruling the house and needs better parenting. If HE wears shorts in the winter he is being an idiot, but in a relatively harmless way.
Do some parenting. Stop letting your children run the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your son is going to school in shorts (especially those stupid lacrosse shorts) when it is below 40 degrees out, rest assured that they are being privately mocked by other adults (parents and teachers). Know, also, that by extension you too are being mocked.
But as no one has a sense of "This is something I shouldn't be doing..." these days, it won't matter to you.
I don't care if petty "adults" are privately mocking my child. Any parent worth her salt knows you pick your battles. Kid isn't going to freeze, and if he is uncomfortable then so be it. Boys aren't the only ones who suffer for fashion.
When it's below 32 degrees, for example? You may want to brush up on your science.
And yes, it looks ridiculous and people are judging you and your kid. Judgement is fine and needed to keep society civil.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your son is going to school in shorts (especially those stupid lacrosse shorts) when it is below 40 degrees out, rest assured that they are being privately mocked by other adults (parents and teachers). Know, also, that by extension you too are being mocked.
But as no one has a sense of "This is something I shouldn't be doing..." these days, it won't matter to you.
I don't care if petty "adults" are privately mocking my child. Any parent worth her salt knows you pick your battles. Kid isn't going to freeze, and if he is uncomfortable then so be it. Boys aren't the only ones who suffer for fashion.
Anonymous wrote:If your son is going to school in shorts (especially those stupid lacrosse shorts) when it is below 40 degrees out, rest assured that they are being privately mocked by other adults (parents and teachers). Know, also, that by extension you too are being mocked.
But as no one has a sense of "This is something I shouldn't be doing..." these days, it won't matter to you.
Anonymous wrote:If your son is going to school in shorts (especially those stupid lacrosse shorts) when it is below 40 degrees out, rest assured that they are being privately mocked by other adults (parents and teachers). Know, also, that by extension you too are being mocked.
But as no one has a sense of "This is something I shouldn't be doing..." these days, it won't matter to you.
Anonymous wrote:If your son is going to school in shorts (especially those stupid lacrosse shorts) when it is below 40 degrees out, rest assured that they are being privately mocked by other adults (parents and teachers). Know, also, that by extension you too are being mocked.
But as no one has a sense of "This is something I shouldn't be doing..." these days, it won't matter to you.
Anonymous wrote:Why does it bother you? It's very warm in the school bldgs and warms up during the day outside. I am a school teacher and i see a LOT of verrry nice coats left behind as kids shed them immediately upon arrival (if they make it off the bus!) ... my own DS seems to run 10 degrees hotter than i do. He's also more physically active. i'd rather he left his coat at home than at school.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in the 80s...and boys did this all the time...and even in college in the 90s there were quite a few that did it.