Anonymous wrote:Hahaha someone spoke about this during Meeting for Worship today to say goodbye to their graduating sibling
Anonymous wrote:who ever posted this i urge you to go do something with your life. being a 50 year old stay at home mom who posts on dc urban mom is never a good look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BACK OFF HATERS
Thanks, Teen Avenger!
. . . and thank you, Awed Bystander, for using the comma correctly!Anonymous wrote:BACK OFF HATERS
Anonymous wrote:I'm a parent of a recent Sidwell graduate. My DC was seen driving dangerously three years ago and someone called the school to report it. The school 1) figured out who it was, 2) called DC into the Dean's office, 3) put him on restricted privileges for a week, 4) notified us so we could follow up at home (we did), and 5) did not put it into his record or notify colleges. So yes, you should call the school and no, it will not ruin the teen's life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's probably just my imagination. But I was on the lookout for reckless drivers this morning heading on Wisconsin Avenue, just for the heck of it. There is a lot of road work going on, and it can get confusing with may lane shifts and closures. I noticed a small black SUV with many stickers, the only one I could read was "Cathedral" (but I assume he must be an STA student). He was driving textbook perfect. 10 and 2 position. Using his mirrors. Putting on his turn signal. Driving carefully and cautiously. Right at the speed limit. I seriously wonder whether his mom saw this post, asked him whether he was the "oblivious" driver talked about the other day, and knocked some sense into him. If so, well done mom (and pp and DCUM).
FYI, it's no longer 10 and 2 (although after decades of driving I can't break the habit). Due to airbags, proper positioning being taught in public schools and private driving schools is 9 and 3 o'clock. http://www.nbcnews.com/business/get-times-youre-driving-all-wrong-518710
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that putting your HS kid in a car like this, is the biggest parenting error, along with sending them off to parties to get drunk and drugged.
This is "the biggest parenting error" .... really.
How do you know that the car isnt used and that the kid may have worked for it and earned it.
Its all relative. The family may be able to easily afford a Maserati and the kid may be driving a 10 year - 100K miles SUV.
Sure your life would survive such scrutiny. By the way - you say this is the "biggest parent error" likely means you are committing many more serious and egregious errors than this one.
Who cares what kind of car they're driving? It's not like you're less dead if the reckless teenage driver who ran you over was driving a 15-year-old minivan.