Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he sounds like a great kid, and you sound like you need some therapy around your own depression and expectations. I say that with all the love in the world. You’re thinking such critical, mean thoughts about him, and probably about yourself. You both deserve support!
Great? How does such a teen ever earn a living? My cousin was like this in his teens — he’s now an affable 37 year old... college dropout who has never had a real job and lives off his parents.
Anonymous wrote:Why assuming no issues? My teen has severe ADHD and associated learning disabilities. His schooling is decent, but not impressive, and left to himself, he'd be playing video games all day, because ADHD and addictive personalities go hand in hand. He needs A LOT of supervision, and will need a lot of supervision in college as well. Despite what idiots say on DCUM about letting their kids fail at a certain age, my son is part of a population that needs an extra decade in order to be a responsible, productive, adult. I know, because my husband and myself were like this too, and we are grateful our parents steered us in the right direction for longer than average.
You might want to double check whether yours has ADHD.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think he sounds like a great kid, and you sound like you need some therapy around your own depression and expectations. I say that with all the love in the world. You’re thinking such critical, mean thoughts about him, and probably about yourself. You both deserve support!
Great? How does such a teen ever earn a living? My cousin was like this in his teens — he’s now an affable 37 year old... college dropout who has never had a real job and lives off his parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe he’s just average? That’s OK, you know. Is he happy? Does he have friends?
+1. My teen DS plays more videogames than I'd like but I've learned that it's how he and his friends like to socialize. He's not at all competitive, doesn't like to join school teams/ clubs, but does well in class and, most importantly, he's kind and has good friends. He won't go to a college that DCUM finds impressive but I'm confident he'll find his way in life and be happy.
On DCUM a child is “average” because they “only” got a 1300 on the SAT or got a couple more Bs than As or only made district titles rather than state!
Grades are no longer a measure of success. ACT/SAT scores and college readiness rates are sliding, yet 50% of all 12th graders in the US have an A average GPA. Teens are several grade levels behind while maintaining As and Bs.
Do not look at your painfully unmotivated lazy child and pretend everything is ok because they have decent grades — EVERYONE has decent grades now. Nearly half the kids who begin college fail or drop out because they’re so many grade levels behind and have no discipline and no study skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe he’s just average? That’s OK, you know. Is he happy? Does he have friends?
+1. My teen DS plays more videogames than I'd like but I've learned that it's how he and his friends like to socialize. He's not at all competitive, doesn't like to join school teams/ clubs, but does well in class and, most importantly, he's kind and has good friends. He won't go to a college that DCUM finds impressive but I'm confident he'll find his way in life and be happy.
On DCUM a child is “average” because they “only” got a 1300 on the SAT or got a couple more Bs than As or only made district titles rather than state!
Grades are no longer a measure of success. ACT/SAT scores and college readiness rates are sliding, yet 50% of all 12th graders in the US have an A average GPA. Teens are several grade levels behind while maintaining As and Bs.
Do not look at your painfully unmotivated lazy child and pretend everything is ok because they have decent grades — EVERYONE has decent grades now. Nearly half the kids who begin college fail or drop out because they’re so many grade levels behind and have no discipline and no study skills.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, I am wondering why your post starts with “assuming no health issues” when, in fact, your kid has a known health issue. I think it might be helpful for you to read up on the many varied effects of ADHD so you will have a better idea of what to expect. Boys in general, boys with ADHD particularly, are often years behind their peers in terms of getting themselves together to be productive, motivated, ready to get on with it. Don’t give up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe he’s just average? That’s OK, you know. Is he happy? Does he have friends?
+1. My teen DS plays more videogames than I'd like but I've learned that it's how he and his friends like to socialize. He's not at all competitive, doesn't like to join school teams/ clubs, but does well in class and, most importantly, he's kind and has good friends. He won't go to a college that DCUM finds impressive but I'm confident he'll find his way in life and be happy.
On DCUM a child is “average” because they “only” got a 1300 on the SAT or got a couple more Bs than As or only made district titles rather than state!
Anonymous wrote:I think he sounds like a great kid, and you sound like you need some therapy around your own depression and expectations. I say that with all the love in the world. You’re thinking such critical, mean thoughts about him, and probably about yourself. You both deserve support!
Anonymous wrote:I think the op has come to accept their kid will be average..see the post heading. Most kids just turn out average. It is a major ego shock to some parents who were fantasizing otherwise. As for having to deal with a drug addicted lazy kid (PP post)or a good student who got into Stanford..would obviously pick Stanford kid every time. Shows the kid was disciplined and worked hard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe he’s just average? That’s OK, you know. Is he happy? Does he have friends?
+1. My teen DS plays more videogames than I'd like but I've learned that it's how he and his friends like to socialize. He's not at all competitive, doesn't like to join school teams/ clubs, but does well in class and, most importantly, he's kind and has good friends. He won't go to a college that DCUM finds impressive but I'm confident he'll find his way in life and be happy.
Anonymous wrote:I think the op has come to accept their kid will be average..see the post heading. Most kids just turn out average. It is a major ego shock to some parents who were fantasizing otherwise. As for having to deal with a drug addicted lazy kid (PP post)or a good student who got into Stanford..would obviously pick Stanford kid every time. Shows the kid was disciplined and worked hard.
Anonymous wrote:Hi OP, I am wondering why your post starts with “assuming no health issues” when, in fact, your kid has a known health issue. I think it might be helpful for you to read up on the many varied effects of ADHD so you will have a better idea of what to expect. Boys in general, boys with ADHD particularly, are often years behind their peers in terms of getting themselves together to be productive, motivated, ready to get on with it. Don’t give up.