Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know she is "very well liked by her peers" if she has no friends and spends time on her own?
Seems a bit tautological to me...
She doesn't spend all her time on her own. She plays 2 sports, has leadership positions in school clubs, does mock trial etc. It's not like she's coming home from school at 3PM every day and holing up in her room. Just that when she has free time not bound by school/clubs she'd rather be alone than with friends.
I guess I don't KNOW she is well-liked by her peers, but when I see her interacting with cross country teammates after meets, etc. she's always surrounded by people, smiling, laughing, gets a lot of likes/comments on social media from people from school etc. (I know that's not a true marker of popularity but still), and so on.
Then I don't see the problem. Maybe you are the problem, over thinking a perfectly normal, balanced kid. You should stop now because she will want to have nothing to do with you as an adult. Take it from someone who has been through that particular, obsessive-parent ringer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know she is "very well liked by her peers" if she has no friends and spends time on her own?
Seems a bit tautological to me...
She doesn't spend all her time on her own. She plays 2 sports, has leadership positions in school clubs, does mock trial etc. It's not like she's coming home from school at 3PM every day and holing up in her room. Just that when she has free time not bound by school/clubs she'd rather be alone than with friends.
I guess I don't KNOW she is well-liked by her peers, but when I see her interacting with cross country teammates after meets, etc. she's always surrounded by people, smiling, laughing, gets a lot of likes/comments on social media from people from school etc. (I know that's not a true marker of popularity but still), and so on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know she is "very well liked by her peers" if she has no friends and spends time on her own?
Seems a bit tautological to me...
She doesn't spend all her time on her own. She plays 2 sports, has leadership positions in school clubs, does mock trial etc. It's not like she's coming home from school at 3PM every day and holing up in her room. Just that when she has free time not bound by school/clubs she'd rather be alone than with friends.
I guess I don't KNOW she is well-liked by her peers, but when I see her interacting with cross country teammates after meets, etc. she's always surrounded by people, smiling, laughing, gets a lot of likes/comments on social media from people from school etc. (I know that's not a true marker of popularity but still), and so on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She sounds great.
She's happy and successful. She sounds like she functions just fine with people when she needs or wants to, and has a good friend.
I think people who aren't introverts sometimes don't realize how exhausting the day can be for an introverted child. School is a big effort, and it can take a lot of time to recharge from that. Even when we enjoy school, and our friends, it's exhausting!
What does that mean?
Anonymous wrote:She sounds great.
She's happy and successful. She sounds like she functions just fine with people when she needs or wants to, and has a good friend.
I think people who aren't introverts sometimes don't realize how exhausting the day can be for an introverted child. School is a big effort, and it can take a lot of time to recharge from that. Even when we enjoy school, and our friends, it's exhausting!
Anonymous wrote:She does sound classically introverted, but not with social anxiety (due to being involved in lots of activities, and some of them requiring heavy social interaction/popularity like student govt). This is one of the least troubling things I've read on here - put another way, your DD sounds awesome and more self confident and self aware than most adults I know.
One of my kids is also introverted and really only feels loose/comfortable with a couple of his oldest friends. He even prefers to hang alone than with them usually, and rarely wants to participate in after school activities because he is wiped after a school day. He is quite happy as he is, though, so even though I do worry from time to time, I try to remember that he is an introvert and just different than I am (and it feels than most teens). I do think he will need to figure out how to finagle a single dorm room in college - haha.
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). I do think he will need to figure out how to finagle a single dorm room in college - haha. Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't worry about her introversion per se, but her "I'm my own hero" line would give me pause. What does that even mean? That no one else is good enough for her, or can teach her anything? It smacks of smugness and hubris. If she is giving off that vibe, she may run into trouble down the road. Hopefully just an odd choice of words and not her actual mindset.