Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, why do parents put their young children in these situations? Are you not ashamed for gambling with their self-esteem just so you’d have a shot at increasing your own social capital?
Kids are stronger than you give the credit for. They can handle a little rejection in life and it builds their self esteem to not be crushed by it. And you are ludicrous if you think all parents go through this crap for themselves.
I agree learning to handle rejects an important skill, but let's not pretend there aren't plenty of parents doing this for their own benefit as much or more than their kids.
Some maybe, but you called on all parents to be ashamed.
To the PP who made the time to add their original derogatory post - why are you even in this forum? Honestly, how small a person are you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, why do parents put their young children in these situations? Are you not ashamed for gambling with their self-esteem just so you’d have a shot at increasing your own social capital?
Kids are stronger than you give the credit for. They can handle a little rejection in life and it builds their self esteem to not be crushed by it. And you are ludicrous if you think all parents go through this crap for themselves.
Yeah, but a lot do. I listen to private school parents spew all of this bullshit about why it’s so much better but why would so many feel the need to talk about it so much if it wasn’t all about them. You people are disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Tell them that their first choice didn’t want them, and so they should now use that as motivation to crush that school’s kids in math and science competitions, and on the soccer field. In addition, teach them to sneak in a red card level challenge off the ball when the referee’s head is turned (though try not to cause any injury - we have a strong code of moral ethics in our family and that would be over the line).
Revenge is sweet. It’s an important life lesson.
(I feel silly needing to say this, but obviously, I kid. Getting rejected just means that your kid got caught up in a numbers game. Nobody’s fault, and it’s no reflection on your kid. Just tell them that.)
Anonymous wrote:Ugh, why do parents put their young children in these situations? Are you not ashamed for gambling with their self-esteem just so you’d have a shot at increasing your own social capital?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about not framing it as “rejected”? A LOT of this is luck. Just not enough spots for everyone.
+1. My DD is young, so we don’t discuss it much, but obviously she knows she went on a bunch of play dates. I just say each school only has so many spots, and they have to figure out how many kids they can fit, and sometimes we may not fit if they have a lot of kids who want to go there. It helped that we never pushed any one school (despite our own preferences), and she liked things about all of them.
This sounds like the right approach. For OP, I would not talk about being rejected but instead say that Mommy and Daddy have decided that XYZ School is the best option for child/family, and that it is all very exciting! This reframes the discussion from being at the mercy of an arbitrary process to making conscious and deliberate choices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, why do parents put their young children in these situations? Are you not ashamed for gambling with their self-esteem just so you’d have a shot at increasing your own social capital?
Kids are stronger than you give the credit for. They can handle a little rejection in life and it builds their self esteem to not be crushed by it. And you are ludicrous if you think all parents go through this crap for themselves.
Yeah, but a lot do. I listen to private school parents spew all of this bullshit about why it’s so much better but why would so many feel the need to talk about it so much if it wasn’t all about them. You people are disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, why do parents put their young children in these situations? Are you not ashamed for gambling with their self-esteem just so you’d have a shot at increasing your own social capital?
Kids are stronger than you give the credit for. They can handle a little rejection in life and it builds their self esteem to not be crushed by it. And you are ludicrous if you think all parents go through this crap for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about not framing it as “rejected”? A LOT of this is luck. Just not enough spots for everyone.
+1. My DD is young, so we don’t discuss it much, but obviously she knows she went on a bunch of play dates. I just say each school only has so many spots, and they have to figure out how many kids they can fit, and sometimes we may not fit if they have a lot of kids who want to go there. It helped that we never pushed any one school (despite our own preferences), and she liked things about all of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The same child who was flat out rejected in 4th grade, went to a smaller school for MS, and just got admitted everywhere in 9th grade. We always Tried to be honest with DC so all the good news today had a very special taste. DC feels like all the hard work paid off.
How wonderful for your child! Congratulations!!!
Anonymous wrote:The same child who was flat out rejected in 4th grade, went to a smaller school for MS, and just got admitted everywhere in 9th grade. We always Tried to be honest with DC so all the good news today had a very special taste. DC feels like all the hard work paid off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh, why do parents put their young children in these situations? Are you not ashamed for gambling with their self-esteem just so you’d have a shot at increasing your own social capital?
Kids are stronger than you give the credit for. They can handle a little rejection in life and it builds their self esteem to not be crushed by it. And you are ludicrous if you think all parents go through this crap for themselves.
I agree learning to handle rejects an important skill, but let's not pretend there aren't plenty of parents doing this for their own benefit as much or more than their kids.