Anonymous wrote:You're an asshole. You don't give a kid piano lessons so that you can brag on Facebook 20 years later that they're playing at Carnegie Hall. You give a kid piano lessons to broaden their world, to help them learn rhythm, timing, how to read music (which will help them with math), etc. Are you also upset about that one time you let your daughter bake cookies because she didn't then turn into Rachel Ray?
Kids do things as kids simply to enjoy their childhood and become well-rounded adults with various interests. They don't do it for you to benefit from it.
Anonymous wrote:I think you misunderstood what you were investing in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much did you spend? Do you need the money now?
OP—Don’t even want to calculate it now. We don’t need the money now. Our house is paid off, retirement is well funded, college and grad school paid for and plenty of savings for weddings and such. I just second guess myself sometimes. I’ve always been very frugal for myself, but splurged on my kids. I have moments of self-doubt and sometimes feel a lack of appreciation. Worse, in-laws always made snide remarks about my kids being in so many things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the return on investment is that they are happy and hard working adults. A lot of the purpose behind those activities is keeping the kid busy to keep them from getting into trouble. Idle hands are the devil’s playground. The hard thing about parenting is that it isn’t a linear graph to show what the thing was that kept them from avoiding a bad situation or taught them a life lesson. So bottom line I think is that you did the best you could with what you had and your kids turned out great. Not every painter is going to be Picasso, but not being Picasso doesn’t mean one shouldn’t paint.
This. you raised well rounded kids
Anonymous wrote:How much did you spend? Do you need the money now?
Anonymous wrote:I think the return on investment is that they are happy and hard working adults. A lot of the purpose behind those activities is keeping the kid busy to keep them from getting into trouble. Idle hands are the devil’s playground. The hard thing about parenting is that it isn’t a linear graph to show what the thing was that kept them from avoiding a bad situation or taught them a life lesson. So bottom line I think is that you did the best you could with what you had and your kids turned out great. Not every painter is going to be Picasso, but not being Picasso doesn’t mean one shouldn’t paint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the return on investment is that they are happy and hard working adults. A lot of the purpose behind those activities is keeping the kid busy to keep them from getting into trouble. Idle hands are the devil’s playground. The hard thing about parenting is that it isn’t a linear graph to show what the thing was that kept them from avoiding a bad situation or taught them a life lesson. So bottom line I think is that you did the best you could with what you had and your kids turned out great. Not every painter is going to be Picasso, but not being Picasso doesn’t mean one shouldn’t paint.
This. You were basically paying to keep them occupied and non-destructive members of society.
Also one thing the pandemic has taught me is that all those random sports clubs and after-school activities actually keep kids healthy and slim. There are a lot more fat tweens and teens in my group than used to be because they're all sitting at home 24/7.
Since gyms and health clubs are closed or severely restricted as well - same goes for parents.