Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought this was going to be about a kid who got rejected from choices 1 through 5, which would be something to be bummed about. Got 1st choice but not 5th choice? NO sympathy. Stop it, shut up, grow up, forget about everything except the school you’re actually going to attend.
Yeah, I don't understand this mentality at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm very blunt with my kids. I'd be clear and firm about the need to shake it off in light of her good fortune!
you need to validate your kids feelings and not just dismiss them. You are not them, they are not you, understand their feelings, they might not have the capacity at 18 to just shake it off
Wow. I’d say emotional resilience is something you teach starting in toddlerhood. I fully expect my kids to take this in stride by high school - and they have!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm very blunt with my kids. I'd be clear and firm about the need to shake it off in light of her good fortune!
you need to validate your kids feelings and not just dismiss them. You are not them, they are not you, understand their feelings, they might not have the capacity at 18 to just shake it off
Anonymous wrote:I thought this was going to be about a kid who got rejected from choices 1 through 5, which would be something to be bummed about. Got 1st choice but not 5th choice? NO sympathy. Stop it, shut up, grow up, forget about everything except the school you’re actually going to attend.
Thus.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd ignore it. She needs to create coping skills on her own at this age.
+1
We don't get absolutely everything we want, and not everyone is going to think we are perfect (or even like us). Rejection is part of life (if you are trying, anyway). She might as well start learning that now.
Anonymous wrote:Explain the Tufts Syndrome to her.
Anonymous wrote:DD got into her dream school. She moves in soon, and she's quite happy. Problem is, she can't seem to shake the fact she was rejected from her 5th choice school. I am certain this is because that school was the most selective of the bunch by far. Anything I can say to her to help her shake that off? Or will school starting help?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm very blunt with my kids. I'd be clear and firm about the need to shake it off in light of her good fortune!
you need to validate your kids feelings and not just dismiss them. You are not them, they are not you, understand their feelings, they might not have the capacity at 18 to just shake it off
There's a way to validate a feeling at be blunt too. Sure, nobody likes how if feels to be rejected - but how you deal with it is more important (especially when it has NO impact on your life and HELPS another person).