Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I know it hurts.
My oldest was born premature and has ADHD/ASD and learning disabilities, so I had all his childhood to understand what he might be capable of. Indeed, he surprised us - by dint of hard work and our entire family's commitment to his success, he went to a decent college. T50. I don't think we could have expected more!
My second is gifted, with a high IQ, but has a serious medical condition that will worsen with age. We are not pushing her, because stress triggers flares that hasten the progression of her disease. I don't know where she will land. All I want is that she stay healthy enough to be financially independent. Same as my oldest, really, but for physical, not psychiatric, reasons.
We both need to work on acceptance, OP. Be grateful for what your family has.
Beautifully said.
Wtf? Beautifully said that T50 is just decent?
"Decent" is positive. It's good. Fine. Perfectly satisfactory. Do you have a different definition of "decent"?
Wouldn't T50 be in the top 1% or better of all colleges. Since when is top 1% only decent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I know it hurts.
My oldest was born premature and has ADHD/ASD and learning disabilities, so I had all his childhood to understand what he might be capable of. Indeed, he surprised us - by dint of hard work and our entire family's commitment to his success, he went to a decent college. T50. I don't think we could have expected more!
My second is gifted, with a high IQ, but has a serious medical condition that will worsen with age. We are not pushing her, because stress triggers flares that hasten the progression of her disease. I don't know where she will land. All I want is that she stay healthy enough to be financially independent. Same as my oldest, really, but for physical, not psychiatric, reasons.
We both need to work on acceptance, OP. Be grateful for what your family has.
Beautifully said.
Wtf? Beautifully said that T50 is just decent?
"Decent" is positive. It's good. Fine. Perfectly satisfactory. Do you have a different definition of "decent"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I know it hurts.
My oldest was born premature and has ADHD/ASD and learning disabilities, so I had all his childhood to understand what he might be capable of. Indeed, he surprised us - by dint of hard work and our entire family's commitment to his success, he went to a decent college. T50. I don't think we could have expected more!
My second is gifted, with a high IQ, but has a serious medical condition that will worsen with age. We are not pushing her, because stress triggers flares that hasten the progression of her disease. I don't know where she will land. All I want is that she stay healthy enough to be financially independent. Same as my oldest, really, but for physical, not psychiatric, reasons.
We both need to work on acceptance, OP. Be grateful for what your family has.
Beautifully said.
Wtf? Beautifully said that T50 is just decent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I know it hurts.
My oldest was born premature and has ADHD/ASD and learning disabilities, so I had all his childhood to understand what he might be capable of. Indeed, he surprised us - by dint of hard work and our entire family's commitment to his success, he went to a decent college. T50. I don't think we could have expected more!
My second is gifted, with a high IQ, but has a serious medical condition that will worsen with age. We are not pushing her, because stress triggers flares that hasten the progression of her disease. I don't know where she will land. All I want is that she stay healthy enough to be financially independent. Same as my oldest, really, but for physical, not psychiatric, reasons.
We both need to work on acceptance, OP. Be grateful for what your family has.
Beautifully said.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I know it hurts.
My oldest was born premature and has ADHD/ASD and learning disabilities, so I had all his childhood to understand what he might be capable of. Indeed, he surprised us - by dint of hard work and our entire family's commitment to his success, he went to a decent college. T50. I don't think we could have expected more!
My second is gifted, with a high IQ, but has a serious medical condition that will worsen with age. We are not pushing her, because stress triggers flares that hasten the progression of her disease. I don't know where she will land. All I want is that she stay healthy enough to be financially independent. Same as my oldest, really, but for physical, not psychiatric, reasons.
We both need to work on acceptance, OP. Be grateful for what your family has.
Anonymous wrote:Get out of your circle and meet more people.
I had a kid I thought was going to a local college. Now I’m working to sign kid up for Social Security benefits due to severe mental illness. It’s very demoralizing for such a young adult to see options evaporating.