Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s absurd to post on social media at all. Why not just send an email to the people that actually care? Or even call them on a telephone? If your relationship with them is so tangential that’s you don’t actually want to speak to them, it’s not something you need to share with them.
We have family abroad and use social media to share our happy events so that when we are actually together we can move quickly to more important topics since we already know the day-to-day. Suggesting email tells me you are old - if not in body than in mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s absurd to post on social media at all. Why not just send an email to the people that actually care? Or even call them on a telephone? If your relationship with them is so tangential that’s you don’t actually want to speak to them, it’s not something you need to share with them.
We have family abroad and use social media to share our happy events so that when we are actually together we can move quickly to more important topics since we already know the day-to-day. Suggesting email tells me you are old - if not in body than in mind.
Anonymous wrote:I still haven't posted where my kid got into college and she's half way through her second year. She wrote a contact in third grade saying I couldn't post anything on Facebook about her.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s absurd to post on social media at all. Why not just send an email to the people that actually care? Or even call them on a telephone? If your relationship with them is so tangential that’s you don’t actually want to speak to them, it’s not something you need to share with them.
Anonymous wrote:My nephew got accepted at UVA! Early action!
I'm so proud of him! I'm not on social media, so I'll just announce here on dcum and I've already told my coworkers (sorry!).
Anonymous wrote:When my kid makes a college decision, I will post something on FB once my kid says it’s okay. It’s their work and their news (and I have a pretty curated FB list of only relatives and people I actually care about). I’ll be very excited for my kid. She’s worked hard and I can’t wait to see all the adventures and experiences and opportunities she will have in college.
I’d love to see on FB that a kid I care about— one of my kids friends or a neighborhood kid I watched grow up— got into Stanford. Good for them. I know some amazing kids and I love seeing where they end up every year.
But I’d hate OP, because her attitude is so bad. There’s a big difference between “suck it snowflakes, I won” (not my kid— me. I won at parenting) and parents who are genuinely proud of their kids hard word and excited for their kid’s next steps.
My kid is at TJ, BTW. And I may have run a lot of carpools, but I didn’t do the work, and college admissions isn’t a validation of my parenting. A kind kid with a moral compass and a good work ethic who is engaged in their community tells you a lot more about the quality of parenting than Stanford v NOVA.