Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Da fuck are soft skills you keep yappering about?
Lol, this is what I want to know as well!!

Anonymous wrote:Da fuck are soft skills you keep yappering about?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's quite obvious that a lot of these tweens and teens have absolutely NO experience at sitting down to a family meal or being guests in homes where meals are served. It IS sad. They don't know what to do with a napkin.
You sound like my ILs. We invited them to join us on a family vacation at a 4 (not 5) star resort. The day they arrived they couldn't get into their room early and when they asked, in a huff, where they could change to use the pool the hotel staff gave the directions to the changing room rather than personally escorting them. Beer was served without a glass. There was a children's menu at the restaurant. The horrors didn't stop!
They could not get over it. They think their "high standards" make them very special, but it is just plain snobbery actually makes them pathetically fragile. They can't just relax and enjoy a vacation with their grandkids because they spend all their time calculating the missteps of others and the "slights" against them. THAT is sad.
I feel sorry for you OP. Your world sounds very small and insignificant, yet somehow you've convinced yourself it is not.
Anonymous wrote:It's quite obvious that a lot of these tweens and teens have absolutely NO experience at sitting down to a family meal or being guests in homes where meals are served. It IS sad. They don't know what to do with a napkin.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh maybe use some of that money you have to buy yourself some humility and get some arrogance detox.
I feel bad for people who are extremely poor and struggle to make ends meet and put food on the table. That's a difficult environment to grow up in. I don't sit back and smugly think to myself "those malnutritioned children are so dull compared to my well fed child". I donate money, food and time to charities that help the less fortunate.
Money isn't everything, once basic needs of food, shelter and basic comforts are met if there isn't stress about basic provisions people can have lovely lives. Parents that devote time, love and attention nurturing their children is what matters. Teaching them valuable skills, morals and kindness. Your kids may be "running circles around the other dull poor cousins" but hopefully they aren't picking up on your snobby "better than thou" attitude because then They will be the ones lacking
They're not poor. And we're the antithesis of snobs. Have a happy thanksgiving.
Anonymous wrote:Not that they're not happy and nice, but if I'm being frank, honestly, their kids are so dull. We can tell our children run academic & soft skill circles around their solidly middle class cousins. I really don't think it's IQ, it's just environment and better schools and higher-caliber peers. Makes me so sad. I wonder if their parents are as cognizant as we are while we watch them interact?
Anonymous wrote:Not that they're not happy and nice, but if I'm being frank, honestly, their kids are so dull. We can tell our children run academic & soft skill circles around their solidly middle class cousins. I really don't think it's IQ, it's just environment and better schools and higher-caliber peers. Makes me so sad. I wonder if their parents are as cognizant as we are while we watch them interact?
Anonymous wrote:It's quite obvious that a lot of these tweens and teens have absolutely NO experience at sitting down to a family meal or being guests in homes where meals are served. It IS sad. They don't know what to do with a napkin.