Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am coming to terms with the fact that my son may always be a B/C student. He tries hard, but has anxiety and does poorly on tests. He has other learning disabilities (mild) and ADHD. He also manages Type 1 Diabetes- which is very difficult. I know he is smart, and I firmly believe he will have a great future, once he hits college and can focus more on his interests. He is talented and well-spoken, so I really am not worried about him in the long run. We will find a college that is right for him. (Middle school currently) The hard thing, and I realize to some degree this is petty, is that honestly all of our friends have extraordinary kids. It's hard when we are together, and one says," I am not sure how to handle our son, XX, getting a B+ this quarter-- it's his first B" do I punish him? What should I do?" etc. you get the idea. These are kids who will do very well academically and have a lot of pressure on them to do well. Parents went to Ivy or near Ivy schools. My husband went to state schools, and I went to a very good college, but we know we are no brainiacs. We have found great success in our lives, and I believe our children will do in what they choose to focus on. (I have another child with pretty severe LDs but high IQ) This is a rambling way of saying not sure how to not let these comments get under my skin, but also not let the complete lack of perspective get in the way our friendships. Advice? Thanks.
It is annoying. And what I have learned is that often the parents exaggerate their child successes. Just this morning I spoke to a friend who told me her daughter got her report card and she got all A's. As the conversation continued, she revealed that her daughter got a B in Spanish and missed an A in history by 2 points.
Anonymous wrote:People also lie a lot. Our daughter was expelled from a school and caught shoplifting. Told all her friends that she switched schools because the old one wasn't academically challenging enough. Told all the relatives the same thing. That's what I realize that everyone else was lying too. Chances are that Suzy Creamcheese and her husband have some secrets about their kids as well.
It's kind of like a friend of mine told me her husband left her and all of a sudden her friends started talking about how shitty their marriages were. prior to that she never knew .
Anonymous wrote:
My child with moderate-severe ADHD and mild LDs has just started meds. We haven't yet reached a full dose, but the change has been remarkable, and my highly able but previously failing child is getting his self-esteem back.
I'm not saying meds are right for everyone, but it's something you should consider.
And I hate that phrase: "does poorly on tests". There are things, like ADHD or LDs or anxiety, that impact test-taking and need to be addressed, which I hope you are.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid is fine and he can hang out with the kids if they make him happy. I would search for some new parent friends if I were you because I could not hang out with anyone who wants to punish their kid for a B. Face the fact that parenting differences do get in the way of friendships because it's a huge part of who they are and how they parent their child.
. Also, what is to say that those friends also won't have academic/athletic superstar kids. I find I really need to work on my own reactions to this scenario than controlling what others are saying, along the lines of what poster 13:21 said. Also, I need to work on not comparing to others - that is always a path to insecurity.