Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I bet he misses his video games![]()
It's okay if your kids aren't 100 percent happy all of the time. Fixing it for them is not good. Your job is to help them develop resilience when things aren't perfect.
Yeah, but every single summer for the whole summer? I’m sorry, but poor kid. The summer is their downtime, he misses his friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You spend the entire summer there? Of course your tween isn't interested - he wants to go to camp, spend time with his friends, and enjoy his room.
+1 to this. Being the kid with an accent at a new camp with kids he doesn't know, when he'd rather be back home with his own friends is probably a bummer. Someday he might appreciate the opportunity to have such an experience as extended visits to a foreign country, but I wouldn't find it shocking that in the present he isn't happy.
I get the sentiment, but he doesn’t have an accent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from Germany and my family goes every year. Different large city.
Do your kids speak German? Have friends or access to other kids their age? What are their interests? Ours like it and go happily every year. Munich is great, plenty to do.
What did he say he doesn't like?
They both speak German, but the younger one doesn’t have friends. The older one 2-3 friends she met through her sport. The younger one refuses to do anything like camp and sports classes. I offered sailing, tennis, riding. Answer is no. Relatives and children of friends don’t match up age-wise.
Anonymous wrote:We went every summer to Portugal, where my mom is from. I liked it as a kid, but I hated going in my teen years. I wanted to hang out with my friends in the summer, go to the pool with them. sleepovers, camps. I missed so many things, it sucked,
Anonymous wrote:Every summer we spend in Munich, which is where my DH is from. I absolutely love it. We have a small apartment there, friends, family, etc. Older teenager loves it, but tween/young teen for the first time told me he doesn’t like it. He was so excited to go this summer and now really can’t find anything good about it. Is this normal? It’s important to me that we all keep going every year, and not slowly erode this commitment. Has anyone experienced this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can he invite along a friend, at least for part of the time? The logistics would be challenging but it might really improve his outlook.
Invite a friend to Germany?? You’re off your rocker.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like you have one teen who likes travel and new experiences, and one tween who just wants to stay home with their friends all summer. Has nothing to do with "home town".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You spend the entire summer there? Of course your tween isn't interested - he wants to go to camp, spend time with his friends, and enjoy his room.
We take trips from Munich - other cities, beaches, lakes.
Anonymous wrote:I bet he misses his video games![]()
It's okay if your kids aren't 100 percent happy all of the time. Fixing it for them is not good. Your job is to help them develop resilience when things aren't perfect.
Anonymous wrote:Can he invite along a friend, at least for part of the time? The logistics would be challenging but it might really improve his outlook.