Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My five are grown. No one living in my basement - at least not right now. My only advice is to love and accept the child you have. Not the child you thought you would have. Provide unconditional love and acceptance. Support and encourage their passions. The time goes by faster than you can possibly imagine.
This is my favorite piece of advice and agree with all of it. I have a grown child but I tell people her success isn't really on account of me; she was pretty much born that way and my influence was minimal. However if you want to maintain a good relationship, my additional advice:
* be particularly patient and forgiving in the teen years (I was bad at this)
* walk away when they are mad because they are incapable of hearing you
* as hard as it is to stand back, don't fight their battles for them, let them fail and fix themselves
* in general do more listening and less talking or yelling
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is your kid. All those people who say my kid won't or doesn't does.
They are smoking, they are drinking, they are vaping, they are having sex.
Remember what you were doing at their age and realize things are happening a lot faster these days. Meet the other kids and meet their parents and be friends with them even if you don't like them.
Don't stock the beach house during beach week with bases and cases of beer.
I was NEVER that kid. I never drank, smoked, did drugs, and was barely kissing boys senior year. I still have never done a drug or smoked a cigarette a day in my life. This is something people tell themselves to make them feel better about their kid who IS doing these things.
Anonymous wrote:It is your kid. All those people who say my kid won't or doesn't does.
They are smoking, they are drinking, they are vaping, they are having sex.
Remember what you were doing at their age and realize things are happening a lot faster these days. Meet the other kids and meet their parents and be friends with them even if you don't like them.
Don't stock the beach house during beach week with bases and cases of beer.
Anonymous wrote:My five are grown. No one living in my basement - at least not right now. My only advice is to love and accept the child you have. Not the child you thought you would have. Provide unconditional love and acceptance. Support and encourage their passions. The time goes by faster than you can possibly imagine.
Anonymous wrote:Not quite there yet, kids 20 and 17, in college. Good students though. I would have thought them to clean the house better. Other than that, I would have hugged them more when young and played with them more and while I think I was always there for them, I wish I did more hugs, love and just overlooked some bad behaviors.
Anonymous wrote:My five are grown. No one living in my basement - at least not right now. My only advice is to love and accept the child you have. Not the child you thought you would have. Provide unconditional love and acceptance. Support and encourage their passions. The time goes by faster than you can possibly imagine.
Anonymous wrote:I’m interested to know if in hindsight parents think that intensive sports were worth it. Especially if the kid stopped playing after HS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take advice from parents with kids who are happy & successful. They did something right.
I chuckle every time the parents of kids who have dropped out of college, live at home at 30 and have zero ambition/ self worth are quick to give advice.
I wonder how many of those kids have disabilites that you don't know about or understand but go ahead, pass judgement on the parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take advice from parents with kids who are happy & successful. They did something right.
I chuckle every time the parents of kids who have dropped out of college, live at home at 30 and have zero ambition/ self worth are quick to give advice.
You can chuckle all you want but those are the people I’d want to hear from—what they would do differently in hindsight.