Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your teenager can’t handle small talk with neighborhood parents, they can’t handle:
-A job interview
-Dating
-Roommate interactions
-Landlord interactions
-Talking with professors, advisors, TAs, RAs
-Alumni interview/admissions interview
-Feedback from boss/internship supervisor
-Interacting with law enforcement and other public authority figures
-Doctors, nurses, medical staff
-Life
Part of your job as a parent is to help your son or daughter navigate things that might challenge them or make them annoyed or uncomfortable, like small talk…
And here you are screeching at other adults and trying to police the world…
It’s small talk to you because you don’t care about the answer. It’s not small talk to the person who is living, breathing, anxious, and probably thinking that it will determine the trajectory of their entire life. It won’t, but they don’t have the life experience to know that yet. I’m shocked at the complete lack of empathy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a senior and every adult she encounters asks her where she wants to go to college, how her applications are going or what her SAT score is. Please give these kids a break. They have enough on their plate. They don’t need to be asked about college at every casual encounter.
And, could people with more social savvy than I have share a good response she can use to deflect these questions?
I have an idea. Do what my son did. He told them where he wanted to go to college, that he wouldn't know or have to commit until spring, and that where he went depended on where he gets in and on what he thinks he will major in and he's still undecided as of right now. That seemed to work. And if her SATs scores aren't very good, which is what I'm perceiving here, she can say "I didn't do as well as I had hoped on the SATs the first time and plan on repeating them in February even though most schools are test optional at this point."
It’s fine that your son did that, but not everyone wants to share all that.
I think these responses are so off. You really can’t imagine how annoying it is to be asked over and over again about something that may be causing you extreme anxiety? Really?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your teenager can’t handle small talk with neighborhood parents, they can’t handle:
-A job interview
-Dating
-Roommate interactions
-Landlord interactions
-Talking with professors, advisors, TAs, RAs
-Alumni interview/admissions interview
-Feedback from boss/internship supervisor
-Interacting with law enforcement and other public authority figures
-Doctors, nurses, medical staff
-Life
Part of your job as a parent is to help your son or daughter navigate things that might challenge them or make them annoyed or uncomfortable, like small talk…
And here you are screeching at other adults and trying to police the world…
It’s small talk to you because you don’t care about the answer. It’s not small talk to the person who is living, breathing, anxious, and probably thinking that it will determine the trajectory of their entire life. It won’t, but they don’t have the life experience to know that yet. I’m shocked at the complete lack of empathy.
Anonymous wrote:If your teenager can’t handle small talk with neighborhood parents, they can’t handle:
-A job interview
-Dating
-Roommate interactions
-Landlord interactions
-Talking with professors, advisors, TAs, RAs
-Alumni interview/admissions interview
-Feedback from boss/internship supervisor
-Interacting with law enforcement and other public authority figures
-Doctors, nurses, medical staff
-Life
Part of your job as a parent is to help your son or daughter navigate things that might challenge them or make them annoyed or uncomfortable, like small talk…
And here you are screeching at other adults and trying to police the world…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a senior and every adult she encounters asks her where she wants to go to college, how her applications are going or what her SAT score is. Please give these kids a break. They have enough on their plate. They don’t need to be asked about college at every casual encounter.
And, could people with more social savvy than I have share a good response she can use to deflect these questions?
I have an idea. Do what my son did. He told them where he wanted to go to college, that he wouldn't know or have to commit until spring, and that where he went depended on where he gets in and on what he thinks he will major in and he's still undecided as of right now. That seemed to work. And if her SATs scores aren't very good, which is what I'm perceiving here, she can say "I didn't do as well as I had hoped on the SATs the first time and plan on repeating them in February even though most schools are test optional at this point."
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a senior and every adult she encounters asks her where she wants to go to college, how her applications are going or what her SAT score is. Please give these kids a break. They have enough on their plate. They don’t need to be asked about college at every casual encounter.
And, could people with more social savvy than I have share a good response she can use to deflect these questions?
mAnonymous wrote:Really? These are 17 and 18 year olds. If they can’t discuss their future plans with adults without their mommy being involved, they don’t have any business even applying to college or joining the military.
Anonymous wrote:I would never ask someone their SAT scores! But no, I don’t agree that the topic of plans for college are off limits or inappropriate.