Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you weren't home schooled for grade school, just picture hs being like a continuation of grade school. Lots of fun parties, social events, hilarious stories, lots of shared experiences, trips to the mall, fun clothes, jokes and in-jokes, trips, infatuations with boys etc. You also start to be 'self and others' aware enough to see cause and effect in peoples choices and behaviours. You see what it takes to be a 'winner' or to be a 'loser' in life. You get exposed to other perspectives on how to do things, or how to think about things. Like a less mature university experience, lol.
More than anything, I think all the socializing hones your BS detector and you learn to avoid idiots and assholes.
You absolutely do not learn this in freaking *high school.* You are completely overstating the value of high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not a damn thing
+1
It sucked
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was home schooled for high school. My mom was extremely paranoid about the many social ills that supposedly filled high schools in the 90s and led me to believe it was the best choice for me, which I believed at the time.
While I actually got a decent education (combination of a very good home schooling program and being very self-motivated), as the years go by I feel like I missed out on so many experiences by not going to a high school. I never got to go to the prom or football games and when I got to college I struggled to fit in at first because I didn't know teenager lingo/slang. As time goes by I feel like I missed such an important part of life as I see friends who have great HS friendships to this day, reminiscing of teenage antics and rites of passage. DH gets it but thinks I'm romanticizing the whole thing...he remembers HS as being bullied and stuck with teachers who didn't care. Who knows what my HS experience would have been like, but I've been thinking a lot about it and feel like I missed out on so much.
So for all you who went to high school, was it a great experience? If you had those 4 years erased from your life, would you feel like you missed out on something important or would you be content?
Your mom was right about the social ills...at that age, teens associate with other teens and get into a lot of trouble experimenting etc. You should be grateful for having a mom who cared enough about your education and well-being. So stop whining.
Ok, so at least she didn't want you to do drugs...isn't that caring ?
OP here. Caring or concern had nothing to do with it. My mom had me believe that everyone in HS was a druggie who would dope me up, and she wasn't a fan of brown people either. So...thanks for your lovely reply.
But, I did have friends and went to prom and did high school sports, etc. None of that is terribly interesting to me now. While I'm not at all close to my high school friends, either geographically or emotionally, I still have some contact and like them as people. I'm 42 for reference.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you weren't home schooled for grade school, just picture hs being like a continuation of grade school. Lots of fun parties, social events, hilarious stories, lots of shared experiences, trips to the mall, fun clothes, jokes and in-jokes, trips, infatuations with boys etc. You also start to be 'self and others' aware enough to see cause and effect in peoples choices and behaviours. You see what it takes to be a 'winner' or to be a 'loser' in life. You get exposed to other perspectives on how to do things, or how to think about things. Like a less mature university experience, lol.
More than anything, I think all the socializing hones your BS detector and you learn to avoid idiots and assholes.
You absolutely do not learn this in freaking *high school.* You are completely overstating the value of high school.
Anonymous wrote:If you weren't home schooled for grade school, just picture hs being like a continuation of grade school. Lots of fun parties, social events, hilarious stories, lots of shared experiences, trips to the mall, fun clothes, jokes and in-jokes, trips, infatuations with boys etc. You also start to be 'self and others' aware enough to see cause and effect in peoples choices and behaviours. You see what it takes to be a 'winner' or to be a 'loser' in life. You get exposed to other perspectives on how to do things, or how to think about things. Like a less mature university experience, lol.
More than anything, I think all the socializing hones your BS detector and you learn to avoid idiots and assholes.