Anonymous wrote:I'm curious about this too OP. The moms are always nice to me in a polite conversation small talk kind of way, but that's generally where it ends. They then gather kind in their own circle and I'm left wondering over somewhere else. This is usually at school pick-up. And also happens at soccer games.
They are not rude or mean at all, just not wanting to go beyond common pleasantries. It's not deep convo in their circles, just talking about school, sports, etc, so I'm always left wondering why they have to do it in a circle.
I was born and raised here, btw, so it's not like there is a language barrier.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, I'll be honest. I'm not sure which vein of "Asian" you are, but here's what I see among many Chinese and Japanese families: they spoil the kids totally rotten and then when the kids go to school, the schools whip them into shape. The parents only enforce the tracks the schools lay down.
But by then, six years in, your kid has already pushed my kid, knocked my kid over, ripped things out of her hands, hit, kicked, etc. many times, and my kid is totally over yours. I am friendly for the most part with the parents of kids my kid is friends with.
What I described above is not across the board for ALL Asian parents, but the majority. It's hard for me to be friends with someone I don't respect, and it's hard for me to respect someone who won't discipline their child.
Anonymous wrote:Okay, I'll be honest. I'm not sure which vein of "Asian" you are, but here's what I see among many Chinese and Japanese families: they spoil the kids totally rotten and then when the kids go to school, the schools whip them into shape. The parents only enforce the tracks the schools lay down.
But by then, six years in, your kid has already pushed my kid, knocked my kid over, ripped things out of her hands, hit, kicked, etc. many times, and my kid is totally over yours. I am friendly for the most part with the parents of kids my kid is friends with.
What I described above is not across the board for ALL Asian parents, but the majority. It's hard for me to be friends with someone I don't respect, and it's hard for me to respect someone who won't discipline their child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm half Caucasian, half Asian and grew up in lily white parts of Europe.
While I have been surprised at the vitriol aimed at Asians as a group on DCUM, I have never felt targeted in real life, in our neighborhood near downtown Bethesda. I know a lot of educated and wealthy international families (Japanese and Korean among them) living there who do not fit any stereotype. We socialize with everyone, and my good friends come from all over the world.
What I have noticed, however, is that I meet a great many stereotypically driven and academically aggressive Asian families in suburbs further away, say Germantown. I suspect the reason is socio-economical. For some reason, these people are mostly Chinese, but my experience does not constitute a valid statistical sample.
I'm white but had plenty of Asian friends growing up (not here unfortunately, I'd like more friends). I'm also puzzled by this. Who are these people who say these things about Asian Americans? I don't know any in real life.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm half Caucasian, half Asian and grew up in lily white parts of Europe.
While I have been surprised at the vitriol aimed at Asians as a group on DCUM, I have never felt targeted in real life, in our neighborhood near downtown Bethesda. I know a lot of educated and wealthy international families (Japanese and Korean among them) living there who do not fit any stereotype. We socialize with everyone, and my good friends come from all over the world.
What I have noticed, however, is that I meet a great many stereotypically driven and academically aggressive Asian families in suburbs further away, say Germantown. I suspect the reason is socio-economical. For some reason, these people are mostly Chinese, but my experience does not constitute a valid statistical sample.
Anonymous wrote:I'm curious about this too OP. The moms are always nice to me in a polite conversation small talk kind of way, but that's generally where it ends. They then gather kind in their own circle and I'm left wondering over somewhere else. This is usually at school pick-up. And also happens at soccer games.
They are not rude or mean at all, just not wanting to go beyond common pleasantries. It's not deep convo in their circles, just talking about school, sports, etc, so I'm always left wondering why they have to do it in a circle.
I was born and raised here, btw, so it's not like there is a language barrier.