Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She needs a job
It doesn’t matter what the job is baby sitting dog walking fast food
Stop paying for things
No she dies not need the phone for safety she can have a phone without paces to TikTok
This is your fault why is she shopping?
Traveling WTH ? No
NP here.
I don’t agree with you. My kids need their phones for safety. I mean, if there’s a shooting or a fire at school then I need to immediately know about it so I can come get them.
It really is a safety need for kids to have their phones.
Op here. Exactly. It also allows me to track her and know where she’s at or if she’s on a bus to know how long it will take her to get home
Omg. If there is a shooting or a fire at school, you aren’t going to “immediately come get them.” Kids don’t need phones for safety at school. That is a myth born out of anxiety that has hindered education greatly.
NP. So if there’s a shooting at your kid’s school you wouldn’t even attempt to immediately go get them?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She needs a job
It doesn’t matter what the job is baby sitting dog walking fast food
Stop paying for things
No she dies not need the phone for safety she can have a phone without paces to TikTok
This is your fault why is she shopping?
Traveling WTH ? No
NP here.
I don’t agree with you. My kids need their phones for safety. I mean, if there’s a shooting or a fire at school then I need to immediately know about it so I can come get them.
It really is a safety need for kids to have their phones.
Op here. Exactly. It also allows me to track her and know where she’s at or if she’s on a bus to know how long it will take her to get home
Omg. If there is a shooting or a fire at school, you aren’t going to “immediately come get them.” Kids don’t need phones for safety at school. That is a myth born out of anxiety that has hindered education greatly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get rid of the screens.
We have screentime on. She still needs her phone to be able to communicate with us for safety reasons while she’s in school, on the bus etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could I suggest that she has a fear of failure? What you are describing generally sounds like my kids until we began to really talk about why they aren't doing stuff. ( It absolutely was the fear of peer rejection for clubs, not making the team for sports, not getting an A or being the smartest in a class.
I see this in my college students in class all the time. They won't start a paper/project because they are in control. Rather than submitting something that could possibly be critiqued as "less than."
Things you say she is interested in (which means she is likely not depressed) are things that are generally not related to success or failure.
Op again. This is a great insight. How do you counter it? How do you build that confidence?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She needs a job
It doesn’t matter what the job is baby sitting dog walking fast food
Stop paying for things
No she dies not need the phone for safety she can have a phone without paces to TikTok
This is your fault why is she shopping?
Traveling WTH ? No
NP here.
I don’t agree with you. My kids need their phones for safety. I mean, if there’s a shooting or a fire at school then I need to immediately know about it so I can come get them.
It really is a safety need for kids to have their phones.
Op here. Exactly. It also allows me to track her and know where she’s at or if she’s on a bus to know how long it will take her to get home
Omg. If there is a shooting or a fire at school, you aren’t going to “immediately come get them.” Kids don’t need phones for safety at school. That is a myth born out of anxiety that has hindered education greatly.
Anonymous wrote:OP I think posters are unnecessarily harsh towards your DD. She sounds like a perfectly normal kid. She is also on the younger side of the grade and I am sure it makes it harder to be self confident and to compete and achieve.
My son is a bit like that but he is slowly getting better. Honestly I just made peace with the fact that he is an average boy and is not AP material. He could do it if he was willing to do the work but he isn’t.
I think as long as your kid is kind, well adjusted, has friends, doesn’t ditch school or take drugs or become a teen mom - she has a right to be herself. I am pretty sure she’ll end up having a job and she won’t be homeless one way or another.
Anonymous wrote:TBH the world feels like it's on fire. An entire generation has woken up to the reality that they will be wage slaves for life and may never own a home. It is actually hard to understand how any young person could feel motivated right now...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She needs a job
It doesn’t matter what the job is baby sitting dog walking fast food
Stop paying for things
No she dies not need the phone for safety she can have a phone without paces to TikTok
This is your fault why is she shopping?
Traveling WTH ? No
NP here.
I don’t agree with you. My kids need their phones for safety. I mean, if there’s a shooting or a fire at school then I need to immediately know about it so I can come get them.
It really is a safety need for kids to have their phones.
Op here. Exactly. It also allows me to track her and know where she’s at or if she’s on a bus to know how long it will take her to get home
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dd will be turning 16 in a month, she’s in 11th grade. She doesn’t want to do any extracurricular, doesnt want to take any AP classes, doesn’t want to join any orgs. If we ask her why, answer is : i dont want to. She doesn’t want to play any sports either but complains she wants to lose weight. We trued therapy and multiple tests , all came back normal. How do you motivate a teen to be more engaged or interested in things? If you ask her what she’s interested in: nothing. All she wants to do is: travel, shopping, tiktok. I put screentime on her phone recently to limit her time online.
We canceled a trip a few months ago because of her school performance. She has a lot of $$ in her savings from money gifted to her by family throughout the years that she has access to even if i dont give her money.
And who is funding those ? Stop paying for travel and shopping if she doesn’t get her act together!
She can also get a job and pay for all this but you definitely should stop giving her what she wants if she’s not performing at the level she should be , both academically and in her extracurriculars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she have friends? If so, does she socialize with them in person.
I didn't take any AP classes in high school either, and still wound up going to a good college and becoming an attorney.[/quote]
I’m a parent of a 12th grader. Those days are over - the of ones of no APs and bad grades and then going to your local state school (at least around here).
Sure, she’ll get into a college. But her choices will be limited. OP, I would start insisting on her doing SOMETHING. Don’t want to do a sport or club activity? Okay you need to volunteer or get a job. (Two things colleges like). Maybe she’ll find her passion. It’s okay if she’s not academic or a grinder. It’s not okay if she’s lazy and chronically online.
Agree. We will focus on job n volunteering opportunities
Anonymous wrote:Could I suggest that she has a fear of failure? What you are describing generally sounds like my kids until we began to really talk about why they aren't doing stuff. ( It absolutely was the fear of peer rejection for clubs, not making the team for sports, not getting an A or being the smartest in a class.
I see this in my college students in class all the time. They won't start a paper/project because they are in control. Rather than submitting something that could possibly be critiqued as "less than."
Things you say she is interested in (which means she is likely not depressed) are things that are generally not related to success or failure.
Anonymous wrote:Does she have friends? If so, does she socialize with them in person.
I didn't take any AP classes in high school either, and still wound up going to a good college and becoming an attorney.[/quote]
I’m a parent of a 12th grader. Those days are over - the of ones of no APs and bad grades and then going to your local state school (at least around here).
Sure, she’ll get into a college. But her choices will be limited. OP, I would start insisting on her doing SOMETHING. Don’t want to do a sport or club activity? Okay you need to volunteer or get a job. (Two things colleges like). Maybe she’ll find her passion. It’s okay if she’s not academic or a grinder. It’s not okay if she’s lazy and chronically online.
Anonymous wrote:Everything you describe, she sounds immature. Being the youngest in her grade definitely isn’t helping.
Was she one of those girls who played with Barbies into middle school? Did she discover this interest in TT and shopping/clothes recently ?
If she’s immature she’s mentally still in middle school. She will grow out of that. It’s probably best she not do AP bc she’s simply not capable probably of advanced work