Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who find the silver lining must’ve had crazy busy lives before. I don’t need a pandemic to spend time with my kids or prioritize family. So no, none of us are happier. We miss our lives.
+1000
You must have little kids.
I don't think we had crazy busy lives before. Our kids were at school 7.5 hours a day and then maybe had choir, soccer practice, or religious Ed that was another 1.5 hours. So, they were getting ready to go to stuff for an hour a day, gone 9 hours a day, then slept 10+ hours at night. Having them home all day is a BIG difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who find the silver lining must’ve had crazy busy lives before. I don’t need a pandemic to spend time with my kids or prioritize family. So no, none of us are happier. We miss our lives.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:^^ I don’t mean to imply that teens will not have occasional low points when they’re upset about not seeing their friends or missing important occasions. Of course they will, we all do. But they shouldn’t be sitting around smoking weed or playing video games all day. That’s just poor parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school kid always had social challenges and struggled to fit in. He doesn't have to try any more, and he doesn't have to feel excluded, so he's happy as a clam. Some kids didn't have a lot of friends to start with, so it's not rubbed in their faces any more.
This. Such a nice break from the mean kids.
I'm the pp, and in our case I don't think the other kids were "mean", he just wasn't thought of when it was time to do something, and he isn't a sporty kid so he didn't have that to connect with either. So he wasn't kicked away from a lunch table, but wasn't necessarily invited to sit down, if that makes sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My middle school kid always had social challenges and struggled to fit in. He doesn't have to try any more, and he doesn't have to feel excluded, so he's happy as a clam. Some kids didn't have a lot of friends to start with, so it's not rubbed in their faces any more.
This. Such a nice break from the mean kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I posit: if your kids are absolutely miserable in this situation, and you don’t have actual hardships in your life right now like loss of income or health, then you’ve raised them poorly.
If they are old enough to understand this is a temporary break but still mope around all day depressed, then they are not going to do well in life.
Success requires adaptation, the ability to make the best of things and try to improve what’s wrong or at least withstand it until it can be changed. I can’t imagine these teens who are depressed about a 2-3 month break will do well with the challenges up ahead in college and the workforce.
Yeah, why don't teens have the emotional intelligence that adults have? Parents, you effed up!
It has nothing to do with emotional intelligence and everything to do with the ability to adapt and maintain a positive outlook in the face of adversity, which is a crucial skill in life.
Anonymous wrote:My middle school kid always had social challenges and struggled to fit in. He doesn't have to try any more, and he doesn't have to feel excluded, so he's happy as a clam. Some kids didn't have a lot of friends to start with, so it's not rubbed in their faces any more.
Anonymous wrote:I thought I was an extrovert but I am absolutely living this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who find the silver lining must’ve had crazy busy lives before. I don’t need a pandemic to spend time with my kids or prioritize family. So no, none of us are happier. We miss our lives.
OR, they are optimistic people capable of viewing positive things even in adversity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I posit: if your kids are absolutely miserable in this situation, and you don’t have actual hardships in your life right now like loss of income or health, then you’ve raised them poorly.
If they are old enough to understand this is a temporary break but still mope around all day depressed, then they are not going to do well in life.
Success requires adaptation, the ability to make the best of things and try to improve what’s wrong or at least withstand it until it can be changed. I can’t imagine these teens who are depressed about a 2-3 month break will do well with the challenges up ahead in college and the workforce.
Yeah, why don't teens have the emotional intelligence that adults have? Parents, you effed up!
Anonymous wrote:People who find the silver lining must’ve had crazy busy lives before. I don’t need a pandemic to spend time with my kids or prioritize family. So no, none of us are happier. We miss our lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seen huge developmental milestones since we pulled the baby out of daycare in early March. Being around him all day has made a hugely beneficial difference in our lives.
Babies benefit immensely from having their own “personal” adult caretaker.
x10000
And all the better when that caretaker is a parent!