OP you’re in the 4th stage of grief. Give it time, you’ll reach that last step.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We try to provide a safe, comfortable childhood then boom! At the end of it all, the devastating rejection. Will it make them stronger and more resilient or bitter?
OP you need help. What a bizarre post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids grew up in NW DC where every extracurricular resource is scarce and competition for everything is really tough.
By college app time they had both racked up a long series of rejections: multiple travel sports teams, musical roles, private school applications, etc. etc.
They took college rejections in stride.
Same, and to the other PP, you have no idea, DC is in the performing arts and has been getting painful rejections since elementary school, which may seem small now but we’re emotionally hard at the time. In HS DC has tried out for the same EC every year since 10th, which was the first year that was possible, and received a very personal rejection every time. That said, for college, we have focused on the data and the long shots that their reaches were (are for the ones still remaining). I am thrilled that DC has some solid hard target acceptances and am bracing myself for a sea of rejections overs the next 9 days. DC seems to be weathering it okay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We try to provide a safe, comfortable childhood then boom! At the end of it all, the devastating rejection. Will it make them stronger and more resilient or bitter?
Maybe you should have attempted to nurture resilience rather plowing through every obstacle that your child may face
Anonymous wrote:We try to provide a safe, comfortable childhood then boom! At the end of it all, the devastating rejection. Will it make them stronger and more resilient or bitter?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Watching the grandfather he was extremely close to die from a terminal cancer was pretty bad.
He's had many rejections/demotions in sports (some where a coach told him he was getting moved up; only to have a higher up TD block it because of a butt kisser); he's had some coaches ghost the team, he's seen really, really bad parent behavior and had a few injuries that caused him to miss a season, etc. The sports world was pretty brutal to him, much, much more so than anything related to school. This is why I think sports can be so beneficial for kids. It's a place where they deal with difficult people, learn to work together and to overcome disappointment, they experience their first rejections, see there are better alternatives, watch what they thought was a bad thing end up opening so many other doors and opportunities. And, they learned sometimes all the hard work and RESULTS won't make a difference. Somethings are not under your control.
Things with school have been very merit-based for him so far which is such a welcome change.
Oh and we have always had the 'if they don't want me, I don't want them' mindset with coaches, schools, etc.
Great post until the bolded, that's a pretty strange mindset to have. Agree with the rest, for all of the people here that mock sports it's more than an EC to get into college, it teaches the value of hard/team work and the joys of winning and lows of losing...pretty important stuff to learn when your are young.
Anonymous wrote:His mother’s cancer was pretty bad.