Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel silly to admit this, but I feel duped or almost lied to by this family. Granted this is my fault because I assumed in my liberal area of NoVA that everyone thought like us. Small minded and dumb of me I know!
I’m just angry I guess that my kid still has to grow up in a world where people hate me and who I love.
Spiraling through the stages of grief right now.
— op
If I knew you in real life and you actually said this out loud, I would start laughing and tell you to cut the drama
and then to take a serious look at your local public school pyramid.
Anonymous wrote:If it makes a difference it appears to be a Christian, probably evangelical, school attached to a pretty conservative church.
— op
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, as a fellow queer parent I get where you’re coming from (PPs: when someone is advocating for me not to have basic human rights, it’s not “intolerant” to not feel super safe around them). That being said, unless the family has actually expressed bigoted views to you, I would continue to be neighborly with them. As others say, humanizing things the church demonizes is a good way to get people out of “such and such a group isn’t really human” mindsets and moght counter any damage the school’s ideology might do to their kid. Maybe not drop off playdates though.
But OP doesn't actually know this about them. She doesn't know anything other than the school they are sending their kids to. I know a lot of non-Christian families who sent their children to Catholic schools because they perceived they were better than the public schools. Personally if I could afford it, I 100% would send my children to private school.. The Northern Virginia public schools are terrible.
But the op pointed out it wasn’t a catholic school. She said it was a conservative Christian school. That seems a little different. Most of those schools require families to sign statements that they believe the same thing and write essays demonstrating it.
Anonymous wrote:Oh, my gosh. Don't say anything to your neighbors. Let them live their life. It sounds like they still allow their kids to play with yours when they could have stopped that a long time ago.
Think about it this way: They know who you truly are -- and they still let their kids play with yours.
That is called being tolerant.
You are being incredibly intolerant here. Let the kids continue to play together. Don't act unless is becomes a real, actionable problem impact your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, as a fellow queer parent I get where you’re coming from (PPs: when someone is advocating for me not to have basic human rights, it’s not “intolerant” to not feel super safe around them). That being said, unless the family has actually expressed bigoted views to you, I would continue to be neighborly with them. As others say, humanizing things the church demonizes is a good way to get people out of “such and such a group isn’t really human” mindsets and moght counter any damage the school’s ideology might do to their kid. Maybe not drop off playdates though.
But OP doesn't actually know this about them. She doesn't know anything other than the school they are sending their kids to. I know a lot of non-Christian families who sent their children to Catholic schools because they perceived they were better than the public schools. Personally if I could afford it, I 100% would send my children to private school.. The Northern Virginia public schools are terrible.
Anonymous wrote:I feel silly to admit this, but I feel duped or almost lied to by this family. Granted this is my fault because I assumed in my liberal area of NoVA that everyone thought like us. Small minded and dumb of me I know!
I’m just angry I guess that my kid still has to grow up in a world where people hate me and who I love.
Spiraling through the stages of grief right now.
— op
Anonymous wrote:OP, as a fellow queer parent I get where you’re coming from (PPs: when someone is advocating for me not to have basic human rights, it’s not “intolerant” to not feel super safe around them). That being said, unless the family has actually expressed bigoted views to you, I would continue to be neighborly with them. As others say, humanizing things the church demonizes is a good way to get people out of “such and such a group isn’t really human” mindsets and moght counter any damage the school’s ideology might do to their kid. Maybe not drop off playdates though.
Anonymous wrote:I feel silly to admit this, but I feel duped or almost lied to by this family. Granted this is my fault because I assumed in my liberal area of NoVA that everyone thought like us. Small minded and dumb of me I know!
I’m just angry I guess that my kid still has to grow up in a world where people hate me and who I love.
Spiraling through the stages of grief right now.
— op