Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Met her in the line at preschool and things were budding and fine between us until first grade. Now everything feels to me like a competition, or nose-rubbing event with her. I may have experienced the last straw.
I first noticed it around early 1st grade. Her daughter came out nose in a book, reading a pretty advanced, Harry Potter-level chapter book and I remarked about it and she replied something like, “Yep! Why, isn’t Larla reading chapter books yet?” It made me question everything. Ever since then it’s been much of the same: If it’s not comments about academics and how advanced her kids are, it’s about how they overachieve in other areas. I’m sick of it.
Today I was shamed for still folding and putting away my 8yo clothes. Of course, she doesn’t do that for her kids.
Wait, maybe I'm competitive but I don't see why her response wasn't valid? I was telling my friend that both of my kids were reading chapter books by 1st grade. Maybe it was the last straw for you though. In general I think the realtionships are natured that way bc everyone is in the same swim lane. It's not taht it is a competition but what else can you talk about and share/compare. I haven't figured this out yet, maybe some are better than others on how to communicate without inciting competition.
NP - you really haven’t figured out how to have conversations with friends that don’t revolve around comparison? Really? That sounds like a nightmare.
The non-competitive response the OP’s friend could have given would be something like, “yeah, she loves to read. [insert topic change]”
My oldest was an early, advanced reader like this kid. Because I knew that, and because I don’t like to compete with my friends, I gave some variation of that response often. It’s possible this woman literally has no clue what typical reading development looks like, but based on what the OP has said, she’s probably just extremely competitive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Met her in the line at preschool and things were budding and fine between us until first grade. Now everything feels to me like a competition, or nose-rubbing event with her. I may have experienced the last straw.
I first noticed it around early 1st grade. Her daughter came out nose in a book, reading a pretty advanced, Harry Potter-level chapter book and I remarked about it and she replied something like, “Yep! Why, isn’t Larla reading chapter books yet?” It made me question everything. Ever since then it’s been much of the same: If it’s not comments about academics and how advanced her kids are, it’s about how they overachieve in other areas. I’m sick of it.
Today I was shamed for still folding and putting away my 8yo clothes. Of course, she doesn’t do that for her kids.
Wait, maybe I'm competitive but I don't see why her response wasn't valid? I was telling my friend that both of my kids were reading chapter books by 1st grade. Maybe it was the last straw for you though. In general I think the realtionships are natured that way bc everyone is in the same swim lane. It's not taht it is a competition but what else can you talk about and share/compare. I haven't figured this out yet, maybe some are better than others on how to communicate without inciting competition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Met her in the line at preschool and things were budding and fine between us until first grade. Now everything feels to me like a competition, or nose-rubbing event with her. I may have experienced the last straw.
I first noticed it around early 1st grade. Her daughter came out nose in a book, reading a pretty advanced, Harry Potter-level chapter book and I remarked about it and she replied something like, “Yep! Why, isn’t Larla reading chapter books yet?” It made me question everything. Ever since then it’s been much of the same: If it’s not comments about academics and how advanced her kids are, it’s about how they overachieve in other areas. I’m sick of it.
Today I was shamed for still folding and putting away my 8yo clothes. Of course, she doesn’t do that for her kids.
Wait, maybe I'm competitive but I don't see why her response wasn't valid? I was telling my friend that both of my kids were reading chapter books by 1st grade. Maybe it was the last straw for you though. In general I think the realtionships are natured that way bc everyone is in the same swim lane. It's not taht it is a competition but what else can you talk about and share/compare. I haven't figured this out yet, maybe some are better than others on how to communicate without inciting competition.
Anonymous wrote:Met her in the line at preschool and things were budding and fine between us until first grade. Now everything feels to me like a competition, or nose-rubbing event with her. I may have experienced the last straw.
I first noticed it around early 1st grade. Her daughter came out nose in a book, reading a pretty advanced, Harry Potter-level chapter book and I remarked about it and she replied something like, “Yep! Why, isn’t Larla reading chapter books yet?” It made me question everything. Ever since then it’s been much of the same: If it’s not comments about academics and how advanced her kids are, it’s about how they overachieve in other areas. I’m sick of it.
Today I was shamed for still folding and putting away my 8yo clothes. Of course, she doesn’t do that for her kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you insecure OP? You sound insecure.
I agree with this. I have a friend who is a braggart and her child is genuinely more advanced academically and physically than mine. But I don’t mind because my own child has some sweet qualities that are not brag-worthy (like how she follows me around Saturday mornings helping with chores, or how caring she is of her little brother and his little friends). But I treasure them all the same and don’t mind oohing and aahing over my friend’s DD’s new trophy.
Anonymous wrote:Are you insecure OP? You sound insecure.
Anonymous wrote:Are you insecure OP? You sound insecure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Met her in the line at preschool and things were budding and fine between us until first grade. Now everything feels to me like a competition, or nose-rubbing event with her. I may have experienced the last straw.
I first noticed it around early 1st grade. Her daughter came out nose in a book, reading a pretty advanced, Harry Potter-level chapter book and I remarked about it and she replied something like, “Yep! Why, isn’t Larla reading chapter books yet?” It made me question everything. Ever since then it’s been much of the same: If it’s not comments about academics and how advanced her kids are, it’s about how they overachieve in other areas. I’m sick of it.
Today I was shamed for still folding and putting away my 8yo clothes. Of course, she doesn’t do that for her kids.
No one should shame you for that. But yes your kids should be putting their own clothes away at 8.
Raise them to help themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Are you insecure OP? You sound insecure.
Anonymous wrote:Are you insecure OP? You sound insecure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've lost friends because of my smart kids. It's not my fault my kids are smarter than average. I don't brag, it's just obvious when I post about them, it above what other kids are doing in academics and music. Find your tribe OP. I mostly have friends are the status as me now. No competition, just moms sharing.
Why are you posting about your kid’s’ accomplishments, presumably on social media, to the extent that it’s alienating people? Truly, what are you standing to gain from it? I can guarantee that it’s some form of attention and you prob deserve this.
+1 It's scary how much personal information people leak without realizing it. A mom at my child's school posts tons of pics of her kids and house and car on IG, and without knowing anything else about this family, I was able to find their address from Google satellite maps just because of some distinctive feature in their back yard that is easily spotted from the aerial view. On top of that, anyone can quickly deduce where she works and where their older child goes to high school just from stuff that appears in the background of all the pics taken inside the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've lost friends because of my smart kids. It's not my fault my kids are smarter than average. I don't brag, it's just obvious when I post about them, it above what other kids are doing in academics and music. Find your tribe OP. I mostly have friends are the status as me now. No competition, just moms sharing.
Why are you posting about your kid’s’ accomplishments, presumably on social media, to the extent that it’s alienating people? Truly, what are you standing to gain from it? I can guarantee that it’s some form of attention and you prob deserve this.
Anonymous wrote:Met her in the line at preschool and things were budding and fine between us until first grade. Now everything feels to me like a competition, or nose-rubbing event with her. I may have experienced the last straw.
I first noticed it around early 1st grade. Her daughter came out nose in a book, reading a pretty advanced, Harry Potter-level chapter book and I remarked about it and she replied something like, “Yep! Why, isn’t Larla reading chapter books yet?” It made me question everything. Ever since then it’s been much of the same: If it’s not comments about academics and how advanced her kids are, it’s about how they overachieve in other areas. I’m sick of it.
Today I was shamed for still folding and putting away my 8yo clothes. Of course, she doesn’t do that for her kids.