Anonymous wrote:OP Here:
Someone asked about my whereabouts ... south FFX co.
I think it is hilarious how this post became about the exact thing I was writing about. Several posters have gone on and on about AAP rather than addressing my point.
Just have a little humility people. The posters who talked about how they talk about AAP amongst parents in their child's class or if asked seem to have proper social intelligence. As for the other posters and the neighbors who were the topic of the original post -- do you really think a parent whose child may be just happy "average" wants to hear all about AAP? It's great to be proud of your kids, but please step back, realize your audience and be sensitive to others' perspective and situation.
I agree, I think its just about having some clue who you are talking to and how what your going on and on about may be completely irrelevant or worse, make them feel like their "average" kid is somehow missing out.
My children are young (not at this stage yet), but since eligibility letters came home, I've heard so many moms around the neighborhood dropping in the fact that DC "got in" - mostly bragging veiled as complaining (oh, will be so hard to leave friends, so hard to have kids in different schools, etc) It is awkward the way that they bring it up out of nowhere in the first minute of conversation, like they want to make sure I know. It doesn't bother me, but I feel like its kind of silly.
I recently read an article titled something like "How to Help Parents with Special Needs Kids" ( I am certainly NOT calling general ed kids, special needs) but one of the things the writer says is "talk about your kids personalities, not about their abilities" - basically saying that while we all love to talk about our kids, if you are going on about how smart your baby is, what words they are saying, how advanced their motor skills are - and you are talking to a parent with a child who will never speak - it is hurtful. More extreme example than what we are talking about here, but I think the general idea applies - I think we can all talk about out kids without the "my kids can do this", "my kid is at this level" kind of banter.