Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you mean that they’re okay if their kids drop out of high school and never get real jobs? Or do you just mean that they’re okay if their kids get a “normal” or even blue collar job instead of being a doctor? Also, what do you mean by “expectations for service”?
I took it to mean they look at the absolute worst screw ups in town and basically tell themselves as long as their kids aren't that bad, they did a swell job. The bar and expectations are basically nonexistent and they seemed convinced they were doing a pretty darn good job. They were talking like small-minded trashy people but you look at them and see two normal healthy middle class parents.
What is small-minded and trashy about giving your kids room to figure out who they are and what motivates them rather than pushing them through a forced grind that burns them out and leaves them focused more on what you want for them than what they want for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:If a child grows into an adult who is happy, self sufficient and has someone to love then that is success in my book.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow OP, I can't believe you would call children "trash." I went on play dates to literal trailer parks as a kid...I assume you wouldn't let your kids visit mine in our apartment now. People can be fine people without having a lot of money. Your family are not the ones I'm raising my eyebrows at.
OP didn't bring up money, you went there. Class and values aren't about money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sometimes you have to back off. It might be different than what you’re talking about, but honestly I’m happy my son will graduate. I’m happy he’s going to be alive to graduate. I’ll be ecstatic if his gpa is 3.3 and he makes it into a state school. I’ll tell him how proud I am of him if it’s 2.8 and he goes to community college. I’m cool with him taking a year or two off to work and save for college while he learns what the real world is like.
He has severe anxiety and depression and was suicidal for a while. He overcame those hurdles and is trying to get back on track, but he did poorly in some classes his freshman and sophomore years. All he can do now is try to repair the damage and learn from his mistakes, while trying to stay healthy. I’d rather have a healthy, reasonably happy, low performing child than heap on the pressure to the point where I have no son.
IRL, when someone asks why DS isn’t taking all the AP classes possible or passes judgment on his college prospects, I’m not going to air all his dirty laundry. I just play it off like it’s no big deal. It isn’t. His health is our big deal.
So yeah. You can take your judgment and stick it where the sun doesn’t shine.
PP, you’re DS is lucky to have you as his mother!
We’re lucky to have him. He’s a good kid. He deserves happiness, even if it means I don’t get to brag about my son going to an ivy or becoming a doctor or lawyer. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you mean that they’re okay if their kids drop out of high school and never get real jobs? Or do you just mean that they’re okay if their kids get a “normal” or even blue collar job instead of being a doctor? Also, what do you mean by “expectations for service”?
I took it to mean they look at the absolute worst screw ups in town and basically tell themselves as long as their kids aren't that bad, they did a swell job. The bar and expectations are basically nonexistent and they seemed convinced they were doing a pretty darn good job. They were talking like small-minded trashy people but you look at them and see two normal healthy middle class parents.
What is small-minded and trashy about giving your kids room to figure out who they are and what motivates them rather than pushing them through a forced grind that burns them out and leaves them focused more on what you want for them than what they want for themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound really threatened by their parenting choices. Why is that? Why does it make you insecure that they're not doing the same thing you are?
My nieces and nephew are doomed, it appears. That's the realization I came to. And it caught me really off guard.
They are not doomed, what a ridiculous thing to say. How old are these kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When they talked about the kids' friends, there was failing school, drugs, tattoos, teen pregnancy. So these issues are present in their kids' social circles but as long as their kids steer clear, it's fine? I can't fathom letting my kids be within 20 miles of that sort of culture. I would literally sell our house tomorrow if my kids were hanging out with low people like that. It wasn't really THAT big of a deal to them.
Grades weren't you better get A's... it was as long as they're passing we don't really pay attention to it. They had no idea what sort of classes they were taking (AP, honors, normal track).
You are delusional if you think your kids' circle is free of drugs, tattoos, and the possibility of teen pregnancy.
I can assure you on good authority there aren't kids failing out of school, getting kicked out of their house, getting arrested, getting tattoos, in my kids' social circles. They're letting their kids mix with trash and didn't seem all that concerned about it; actually in denial about it, that their kids are different and a little better than the peers in their social circles.
You lost me at calling fellow humans "trash."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You sound really threatened by their parenting choices. Why is that? Why does it make you insecure that they're not doing the same thing you are?
My nieces and nephew are doomed, it appears. That's the realization I came to. And it caught me really off guard.