Anonymous wrote:Are you Mark Zuckerberg or Misty Copeland? Why would you think your kid would be? Most people are average.
You sound like my mother (who I rarely speak to). I graduated from an Ivy League law school, got a big law job, have a great career. She’s still disappointed I’ve “given up on being a Supreme Court Justice.”
Anonymous wrote:This thread is six years old.
Anonymous wrote:OP, when people ask you what your kid's "thing" is, are you sure they're asking about something that's not, y'know, a normal kid interest? Most of the time, a normal parent conversation for the toddler/preschool set contains a discussion of what the kids are currently into, for the purposes of commiseration and perhaps future birthday gifting.
I mean, if you asked me what my not-quite-3 kid's "thing" is, I might very well tell you "Paw Patrol". And another parent would laugh and say their kid is totally obsessed with "Frozen" and they have now listened to the soundtrack fifty million times. And someone else will tell you that their potty-training kid is totally fascinated by poop and omg they are So Done. Thus go the conversations. It's totally not about how Larla is future Mark or Misty.
Anonymous wrote:Are you Mark Zuckerberg or Misty Copeland? Why would you think your kid would be? Most people are average.
You sound like my mother (who I rarely speak to). I graduated from an Ivy League law school, got a big law job, have a great career. She’s still disappointed I’ve “given up on being a Supreme Court Justice.”
Anonymous wrote:OP, I am a preschool teacher and here is a secret... The administration at every school I have taught in instructs the teachers to tell parents that their child is “gifted”, “advanced” or “shows talent”. It is how preschools keep parents happy and paying tuition.
Every other poster on DCUM thinks they have a gifted child. Don’t believe it for one hot New York minute!
Anonymous wrote:Most kids aren’t “gifted,” but they all have a gift. That is, they might not be better than most other people in a particular area, but they will have at least one area of strength, whether that is math, people skills, music, humor, etc. If we stop trying to get ahead and instead focus on how we can use our strengths to contribute to the communal good, society would be a much nicer place.