Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s suchhhhhh a probbbblemmmm. Thank goodness you were able to find a way to tell us about your Second Home in Jackson. Your kids are perfect, you are the perfect parent, and all those mean meanies who let their kids do different things are so horrrrrible!
Lolz
Why do people always have to mention their 2nd home?
Personally I’m very interested in OPs second home. Especially one she needs to fly to and then only uses a few weeks a year. OP, do you mind sharing what type of place it is and what your HHI or NW is? I’m trying to figure out when it becomes worth it to do something like that.
They likely rent it out the rest of the year. We do that with our beach house and it pays for itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s suchhhhhh a probbbblemmmm. Thank goodness you were able to find a way to tell us about your Second Home in Jackson. Your kids are perfect, you are the perfect parent, and all those mean meanies who let their kids do different things are so horrrrrible!
Lolz
Why do people always have to mention their 2nd home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My ex would rag on the kind of people who bragged like this but then force our then-4/5/6 year old to ski crazy mogul runs under the lift so he could hear people cheer for them from the lift. Kid could do it with style but wanted to be with their friends or playing on tree runs and would cry to me after.
At the time we were locals and skiing 40-60 days/year.
You don’t have to be a visitor on vacation to be a total arrogant loser who tries to feed his ego through his children because he’s a small man. In all ways.
It sounds like your kids were crying because they had FOMO about not skiing with their friends, not that they minded skiing moguls under the lifts. We're local to a mountain town, and our kids want to ski with their friends, too, whether it's under the lift, in the trees, in the terrain park, or on the Nastar course. By 7, they load the lift on their own when they're with their team, so they feel very independent and know the mountain. When they have a day off, they no longer think they need us. It's a little sad, actually. It happens too fast. From 7-8, they'll still ski with parents, but hopefully it's with a friend and their mom or dad. By 9-10, family skiing is over, except on special occasions, like holidays, if you plan a trip to another mountain, or if you let them ditch the morning of school to ski with you on a powder day.
Anonymous wrote:My ex would rag on the kind of people who bragged like this but then force our then-4/5/6 year old to ski crazy mogul runs under the lift so he could hear people cheer for them from the lift. Kid could do it with style but wanted to be with their friends or playing on tree runs and would cry to me after.
At the time we were locals and skiing 40-60 days/year.
You don’t have to be a visitor on vacation to be a total arrogant loser who tries to feed his ego through his children because he’s a small man. In all ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s also kind of silly because there is a big difference in difficulty just based on conditions. A black that is powdery is not all that bad. An icy one is a whole other thing.
Only plebs ski ice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems to be a thing in my social circle where the kids and parents are obsessive about skiing black or double black runs out West. My kids are competent skiers, have taken lessons and we ski several weeks a year (own a second home in Jackson) and we mostly do blues. I have 7 year old twins and I think it’s safer for this age. Skiing isn’t something I would push just to be able to say we do that.
oh the irony of this post