Anonymous wrote:Luckily, no one in my family has ever gone to a public school. (Even the very poor ones went to regular Catholic Schools -- nothing fancy -- but still not public).
I get why people who can't afford it go to public schools. The ones I don't get are the ones who spend money on fancy mansions and cars and then send their kids to whatever public schools are in their neighborhoods. Seems like weird values.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I reframed my thinking a bit on this issue now that we are sending a child to private to avoid feeling guilty about spending the money/ people judging you for spending so much money on private school---for me, I work full time and sending my kid to private is equivalent to working part time. I know LOTS of mothers who started working part time once they had kids and have never heard anyone judge them because of economic impact. So, I figure its the same as if I was working part time, or had worked part time all those years up until now. Don't look back and just focus on your family.
Or parents that spend money on expensive car leases, houses with 5-6 bedrooms with only 1-2 kids, country club memberships, multiple vacations, gym memberships, expensive shoes, purses and name brand clothing.
I find that someone wants to judge me on spending money on private school, I am quick to point out that we have no car loans, a modest house, no memberships, take simple frugal vacations and I can't even tell you the last time I purchases a piece of clothing, purse or shoe over $70. My child's education is more important to me than a Lexus car lease or a LV bag.
Anonymous wrote:I reframed my thinking a bit on this issue now that we are sending a child to private to avoid feeling guilty about spending the money/ people judging you for spending so much money on private school---for me, I work full time and sending my kid to private is equivalent to working part time. I know LOTS of mothers who started working part time once they had kids and have never heard anyone judge them because of economic impact. So, I figure its the same as if I was working part time, or had worked part time all those years up until now. Don't look back and just focus on your family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Public school teacher here. My ex is a public school teacher. Our kid goes to private on scholarship. No guilt. Maybe if MCPS paid me enough to buy a house in a better pyramid.
Another public school teacher with kids in private. Anyone judging you should get over it.