Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:most parents drive their kids to school through high school
OP here. I think this is part of the problem, too. I do drive her in the AM. In the winter it was SO DARK and she has to traverse a really dangerous intersection where kids have been hit on more than one occasion. I think this is the problem. She just assumes I don’t mind doing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:fwiw, our child, 12, walks nearly a mile to and from school every day. Only exceptions are torrential downpours and below 30 degrees. She manages fine. I WFH and either start my day around 730am or I make myself busy with household chores (laundry, water plants, choose to walk the dog) around 730am so as to thwart any potential whining or complaining. Occasionally we might make an exception but she appreciates it then -- as opposed to expects it. She has met kids in other grades this way and has devised a few routes depending on which kids are walking. Overall, she enjoys the independence. YMMV.
Why wouldn't you drive your kid?
Lazy. Sitting at home when lots of parents are taking their kids to school THEN commuting to work.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Imagine being a teen girl after a long day, on your period, with cramps and the attendant GI issues, having to lug home heavy bags in the heat and your witch of a mother won't even answer your texts and then gets mad at you for being in a bad mood, because she thinks sitting at a light is an ordeal. What a nasty, nasty mother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its laughable to me that its such an "ordeal" and "Not easy by any means" for you to hop in the car and drive 1.5 miles (or whatever) to the school but your daughter can't complain or ask for rides walking home after a full day of middle school (exhausting) carrying a heavy bag (we never had to haul laptops around), with period cramps, etc.
You sound like a low effort kind of parent.
Right? And the kid isn’t allowed to get upset when her lazy mother can’t even respond to her texts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:fwiw, our child, 12, walks nearly a mile to and from school every day. Only exceptions are torrential downpours and below 30 degrees. She manages fine. I WFH and either start my day around 730am or I make myself busy with household chores (laundry, water plants, choose to walk the dog) around 730am so as to thwart any potential whining or complaining. Occasionally we might make an exception but she appreciates it then -- as opposed to expects it. She has met kids in other grades this way and has devised a few routes depending on which kids are walking. Overall, she enjoys the independence. YMMV.
Why wouldn't you drive your kid?
Anonymous wrote:Its laughable to me that its such an "ordeal" and "Not easy by any means" for you to hop in the car and drive 1.5 miles (or whatever) to the school but your daughter can't complain or ask for rides walking home after a full day of middle school (exhausting) carrying a heavy bag (we never had to haul laptops around), with period cramps, etc.
You sound like a low effort kind of parent.