Anonymous wrote:Your pride shouldn't be tied to their careers and salaries but their ability to function as healthy, productive, conscientious adults carving a good life for themselves and others around them.
Anonymous wrote:I am curious. Teacher? Doctor? Lawyer?
Anonymous wrote:One works in a hospital psych. clinic, seeing patients, some research ( we’ll see how long that lasts), mentoring grad. students. The other works for an educational media company developing new courses. Both are happy. I have no idea how much either earns; more important is that both are responsible, kind adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's a veterinarian. He told us he was going to be a vet when he was in kindergarten, and he never wavered in this. I'm very proud.
MIL is another story, though. She told him that being a veterinarian is for "people who can't hack it in real medical school."
This thread is shocking, why are so many people absolute garbage humans and why are they graced with family still on speaking terms with them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm proud that all my adult children have careers in the helping profession. One is a software developer working in the medical field, one is a data manager in a cancer hospital, one is a paralegal working in a victims' rights unit, and one is an analyst in a government agency focused on reducing harm.
Awww. Mine is in a helping profession too as a pole dancer. She helps many overweight ugly stressed guys find some fun.
Anonymous wrote:He's a veterinarian. He told us he was going to be a vet when he was in kindergarten, and he never wavered in this. I'm very proud.
MIL is another story, though. She told him that being a veterinarian is for "people who can't hack it in real medical school."