Anonymous wrote:When my son got into Gonzaga, a friend asked me why I wasn't concerned that he was going to be surrounded by a bunch of entitled and privileged kids. I kid you not. I was almost defending the school talking about the diversity in the school and all the financial aid they give. Also talked about the service they do, She didn't want to know about it. We hardly speak now.
Anonymous wrote:Op, they are not your tribe any longer. Accept it. Don't make it worse by assigning blame. Btw, you would seem clueless to not understand a basic fact: those neighborhood kids are your child's peers, only you're saying they're not good enough. You are seeking better. Or you are seeking a school environment better than what these have parents have chose. So that's criticism. Not spoken but it's there. Be gracious. You should never have to accept rude comments to your face but accept that the dynamic for you within the neighborhood has drastically changed. That's on you. You chose this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP sharing the facts of how this went down within a social group we belonged to at the time we applied to Private:
First off, just about every parent in this social group had applied to Private for their kids, including us.
Our kid was the only one in the group accepted anywhere with everyone else's kid not accepted.
Among the group the reaction was split. A few parents openly expressed that they were happy for us. A few others stated that they were " secretly relieved that their kids did not get in because, after all its a toxic place or privilege and over priced" ( these people HAD APPLIED though, despite this)
One parent seemed to get really invested in fact that our DC was admitted for 2 years afterwards she would email me outlining what I could be doing with my money if I weren't paying tuition and becoming increasingly hostile to me personally
Very, very weird
Now that is crazy. Do you know her really well? If not, that's insane. She has no right to tell you what you could and could not be doing with money. Where do people get that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We went through this a couple of times with both kids. There is jealousy and anger involved, especially if you tell them it is because of substandard MCPS.
We told people we wanted religious element in education and the satisfied them. But know that they are still steaming about it. One time I posted something on Facebook about common core and how I am glad my kids don't deal with it, and this rabid mom attacked me. She is one who asked my why I pulled my daughter out of MCPS before anyone. She also seemed happy to hear that it was religious reasons. But now she knows there are other benefits we enjoy and she is angry.
So you post something inflammatory on Facebook, and are annoyed that someone reacted to it? You can’t even see your part in this, can you?
Anonymous wrote:Op is delusional! Make sure you keep your public school friends. Navigating play dates and hangouts with kids who live all over the dmv can be a hassle so it is nice to have your old friend group still in the mix.
Anonymous wrote:OP, NO ONE is jealous of you spending $53,000 for your child to attend Bullis. Guaranteed.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly OP, I might be jealous that you have a sh*t-ton of money, but if I had enough for private school tuition I don't think that's where I'd spend it anyway.
Anonymous wrote:NP sharing the facts of how this went down within a social group we belonged to at the time we applied to Private:
First off, just about every parent in this social group had applied to Private for their kids, including us.
Our kid was the only one in the group accepted anywhere with everyone else's kid not accepted.
Among the group the reaction was split. A few parents openly expressed that they were happy for us. A few others stated that they were " secretly relieved that their kids did not get in because, after all its a toxic place or privilege and over priced" ( these people HAD APPLIED though, despite this)
One parent seemed to get really invested in fact that our DC was admitted for 2 years afterwards she would email me outlining what I could be doing with my money if I weren't paying tuition and becoming increasingly hostile to me personally
Very, very weird