Anonymous wrote:What do you want most for your kids? For me it’s to be happy, healthy, have opportunities to try new things, and to be set up for career options that pays the bills (not necessarily to make $600k mind you, as I don’t think that’s necessary for a happy fulfilling life).
Healthy: that’s physical health and metal health. Living in a pressure cooker is not good for mental health. Knowing how to relax, having time for family and friends - all good for mental health. I remind myself that when there are decisions to be made about going up a level in sports, putting academic pressure on, etc.
Happy: I make a point to model, encourage, and talk about the things that actually are demonstrated to make people happy. Social connections. Having agency in your own life (ie kids have opportunity to make own decisions, and live with consequences even if those paths aren’t necessarily what you think is best). Listen to the episodes about raising happy kids in the Happiness Lab.
Career that pays the bills: we talk about different career paths, what it takes to get there, and the trade offs. We expect them to do well in school, but don’t review homework every night, hire tutors if they’re doing fine, etc. We’d definitely help if they are struggling, and give advice (encouraging them to talk to teachers, etc) but if they are meeting our basic standards of being respectful, turning work in, and generally not slacking, it’s their decision if they want to do Beast Academy for fun (something they did in elementary school) or join the debate team (something I’ve suggested to my HS daughter who is very self motivated to get into a good school but which I’m not pushing further, other than letting her know my I thought my experiences in things like debate and model un were great experiences that helped me later in college and jobs)
Anonymous wrote:You make more than 95% of the people here, and probably more than 90% of the people on DCUM.
So shut up. You're part of the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Move to a school that’s not full of rich white people.
Anonymous wrote:You make more than 95% of the people here, and probably more than 90% of the people on DCUM.
So shut up. You're part of the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You make more than 95% of the people here, and probably more than 90% of the people on DCUM.
So shut up. You're part of the problem.
Op - isn’t the hope that our kids do better than we do?
I know dh and I have done significantly better than our own parents.
PP you replied to. I am worth 15M in my 40s. I do not go about wringing my hands like you, even though one of my kids has special needs, and we are establishing a trust fund for them. You are tone deaf, and this is why I am admonishing you.
Come on, OP. You're better than this. Children are not guaranteed the successes of their parents. Generational wealth goes a long way to mitigate risks for the next generation. Instead of competing stupidly in things that don't matter... think how you're going to transmit wealth and teach your kids how to manage it. They will need be taught how not to be greedy, how to be patient instead of impulsive, how to play the long game, how to hedge their bets. They will need to build on whatever cognitive skills have been handed down to them, and apply themselves with decent work ethic to respectable careers, no matter what fortunes you transmit, even at an early age.
Ask yourself the right questions, instead of faux-complaining about a competition your kids may or may not need to be part of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You make more than 95% of the people here, and probably more than 90% of the people on DCUM.
So shut up. You're part of the problem.
Op - isn’t the hope that our kids do better than we do?
I know dh and I have done significantly better than our own parents.