Anonymous wrote:Tell me your kid is autistic without telling me your kid is autistic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Desperate to know what it really is. Especially now that I know there is a panda endocrinologist out there in the world.
Is he obsessed with:
-the Titanic?
-tornados?
-earthquakes?
-space?
-tortoises?
-the American civil war?
-railroads?
These are all obsessions of adults I know who have had them since childhood and leveraged into fascinating lives.
Help! Throw us a (*not dinosaur) bone, please, OP.
Ok, it's the panda endocrinologist thing that pushed me over the edge of spilling - he wants to command submarines. I told you it was niche!
Aw. Thanks for replying and spilling!
My child has shown an interest in a different service academy, so we have gently encouraged it while making sure she’s realistic about it. Initially she thought the navy was for her because we are near some key stuff on the west coast, but a few ship tours redirected her energy. Turns out she has crippling claustrophobia if she goes below deck! I had to carry her out of a ship.
We are also watching her vision because if she takes after her father, it will change for the worse in the next 2-3 years.
I was going after a specific career but can’t equalize pressure in my ears so that kept me from completing necessary trainings to progress.
So OP, the only bit of advice I would give is to start now with observing what mental or physical barriers there might be to a military career. It would be devastating to get pretty far through the appointment process only to find out that vision, claustrophobia or something else was going to come between DS and a long-held dream.
He adores them. I basically have to carry him out, but for different reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Desperate to know what it really is. Especially now that I know there is a panda endocrinologist out there in the world.
Is he obsessed with:
-the Titanic?
-tornados?
-earthquakes?
-space?
-tortoises?
-the American civil war?
-railroads?
These are all obsessions of adults I know who have had them since childhood and leveraged into fascinating lives.
Help! Throw us a (*not dinosaur) bone, please, OP.
Ok, it's the panda endocrinologist thing that pushed me over the edge of spilling - he wants to command submarines. I told you it was niche!
Aw. Thanks for replying and spilling!
My child has shown an interest in a different service academy, so we have gently encouraged it while making sure she’s realistic about it. Initially she thought the navy was for her because we are near some key stuff on the west coast, but a few ship tours redirected her energy. Turns out she has crippling claustrophobia if she goes below deck! I had to carry her out of a ship.
We are also watching her vision because if she takes after her father, it will change for the worse in the next 2-3 years.
I was going after a specific career but can’t equalize pressure in my ears so that kept me from completing necessary trainings to progress.
So OP, the only bit of advice I would give is to start now with observing what mental or physical barriers there might be to a military career. It would be devastating to get pretty far through the appointment process only to find out that vision, claustrophobia or something else was going to come between DS and a long-held dream.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Desperate to know what it really is. Especially now that I know there is a panda endocrinologist out there in the world.
Is he obsessed with:
-the Titanic?
-tornados?
-earthquakes?
-space?
-tortoises?
-the American civil war?
-railroads?
These are all obsessions of adults I know who have had them since childhood and leveraged into fascinating lives.
Help! Throw us a (*not dinosaur) bone, please, OP.
Ok, it's the panda endocrinologist thing that pushed me over the edge of spilling - he wants to command submarines. I told you it was niche!
Anonymous wrote:Tell me your kid is autistic without telling me your kid is autistic.
Anonymous wrote:Tell me your kid is autistic without telling me your kid is autistic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m trying not to judge. I don’t know why you are even worrying about whether it will become a profession for him or not. As you say, he is 12.
We have always respected our child’s interests. It is what makes them happy and intellectually stimulated. Your kid is lucky he has something he is passionate about. I find it really sad that your kid felt he needed to hide a passion of his from you and that you aren’t modeling learning and dreaming big for him. This is a parental fail and he will remember it.
I don't think I'm not modeling dreaming big? But like everyone has agreed, he is 12. This started at 7. Would you rather I have been pushing him toward the equivalent of Harvard in second grade? I know how those DCUM threads go, so that's rhetorical. We did what we thought was best for him, which was to encourage him to pursue other things. I thought at his age, he would find other things he was interested in.
It’s really not that niche. I went to the Naval Academy, spent a night on a submarine under water once which was super neat (women couldn’t go subs then), and now know a ton of people who have served on subs and even commanded them. There are a few well traveled paths towards commissioning in the Navy as a sub officer or sub supply officer, as well as many opportunities to serve on submarines as an enlisted Sailor. Twelve years old is not too soon to talk with him about what Academics, sports, personal lifestyle choices (drugs/alcohol) would be required to go to the Academy or enlist.