Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious did all your parents plan your entire summer out in January or did you just have like an actual summer?
I mean the kid's a teenager. This thread is embarrassing and coddling.
Isn't the whole point of being a teen is finally having some weeks of nothing and fun. Limit the screens and let them be bored and create their own fun.
I went to sleep away camp for 8 weeks at age 13. My kids are going for 7 weeks at same age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t get 13-year-old to go to Sleepaway camp. Her main issue is she thinks she won’t be able to sleep well. She is very high maintenance and requires a lot of conditions to sleep. She also tends to be sleepwalker. Should I continue to encourage her to find a sleep away camp or let this go? I feel like she’s missing out on such a great childhood experience.
13 is old to start unless she is really interested in going. Sleepaway camp isn’t for high maintenance kids. They won’t like it. They need to be adaptable, resilient, and ok being uncomfortable from time to time and dealing with it.
Anonymous wrote:My 14-year-old is working as a CIT at a tennis camp, with the hope that he will get hired next year when he is 15 (the minimum age to work at the camp).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Government contractor as IT support help desk, $30/hr.
A 13 year old??
Yes, troubleshoot network and application issues on PC and MAC. DH taught him how to do that at the age of ten. My neighbor is a Fed and she convinces one of the gov contractors to hire my son.
Similar for our kid 14 though he builds out AI/AR environments for companies/orgs. Makes a ton of money.
AI and AR are two completely separate fields, so which is it. Please, provide more details...which companies, what languages is your kid using, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t get 13-year-old to go to Sleepaway camp. Her main issue is she thinks she won’t be able to sleep well. She is very high maintenance and requires a lot of conditions to sleep. She also tends to be sleepwalker. Should I continue to encourage her to find a sleep away camp or let this go? I feel like she’s missing out on such a great childhood experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4 weeks of camp, 2 weeks of vacation, odd babysitting and dog walking jobs and hanging out with friends. I’m off in the summers.
You are off and you ship a teen off for a month of camp?
Anonymous wrote:Just curious did all your parents plan your entire summer out in January or did you just have like an actual summer?
I mean the kid's a teenager. This thread is embarrassing and coddling.
Isn't the whole point of being a teen is finally having some weeks of nothing and fun. Limit the screens and let them be bored and create their own fun.
Anonymous wrote:Four weeks band camp, two weeks sleepaway, one week fishing camp, the rest vacation/veg out.
Anonymous wrote:If kids still rode bikes, played outside, read books, took hikes, played flashlight tag and did all the stuff I did in the summer in the 80s, I’d be ALLL about not scheduling anything for them. Unfortunately, if I don’t schedule camps, trips, structured activities, and athletics, the entire summer would be screens and no exercise.
Anonymous wrote:If kids still rode bikes, played outside, read books, took hikes, played flashlight tag and did all the stuff I did in the summer in the 80s, I’d be ALLL about not scheduling anything for them. Unfortunately, if I don’t schedule camps, trips, structured activities, and athletics, the entire summer would be screens and no exercise.
Anonymous wrote:I can’t get 13-year-old to go to Sleepaway camp. Her main issue is she thinks she won’t be able to sleep well. She is very high maintenance and requires a lot of conditions to sleep. She also tends to be sleepwalker. Should I continue to encourage her to find a sleep away camp or let this go? I feel like she’s missing out on such a great childhood experience.