Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid brought home an 84 and I lost it. Since then, worse grades. I dialed in the pressure cooker. How do I dial it back? Have you been there?
I know I did wrong. I took way too many marbles out of her jar. Too much pressure too soon. She’s cracking to please me, not herself. She was fine before I intervened. I feel awful and responsible for bringing too much negativity into her life.
For the record, we expect straight A’s. She’s capable of this. It’s like I ruined her psyche.
For the record, do you also expect a suicidal kid? Because that's what you are risking.
DP.
Oh, puhleeze, stop it with suicidal bullshit! Kids who are suicidal aren't suicidal because their parents 'expect an A'.
Anonymous wrote:My kid brought home an 84 and I lost it. Since then, worse grades. I dialed in the pressure cooker. How do I dial it back? Have you been there?
I know I did wrong. I took way too many marbles out of her jar. Too much pressure too soon. She’s cracking to please me, not herself. She was fine before I intervened. I feel awful and responsible for bringing too much negativity into her life.
For the record, we expect straight A’s. She’s capable of this. It’s like I ruined her psyche.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid brought home an 84 and I lost it. Since then, worse grades. I dialed in the pressure cooker. How do I dial it back? Have you been there?
I know I did wrong. I took way too many marbles out of her jar. Too much pressure too soon. She’s cracking to please me, not herself. She was fine before I intervened. I feel awful and responsible for bringing too much negativity into her life.
For the record, we expect straight A’s. She’s capable of this. It’s like I ruined her psyche.
For the record, do you also expect a suicidal kid? Because that's what you are risking.
Anonymous wrote:Did you apologize?
Seriously, that goes a long way with kids. With everyone, really.
We're human and we make mistakes. Even parents. It's ok to admit that to your DD and to apologize honestly and directly -- and it's actually a good model for her, because she's also going to screw up plenty and will need to know how to apologize and repair relationships, too.
Something like: "I'm so sorry I flipped out about your XYZ grade last week. I realize I completely overreacted, and I feel awful about it. Please know that I don't expect you to be perfect -- none of us can be, myself included. Hell, you just saw me flip out over an 84, so clearly I make mistakes, too! Anyway, I'm sorry about that. I know what I said was hurtful and wrong, and I know I can do better than that."
Anonymous wrote:This is pretty common among parents who were not high achievers, like OP. She "doesn't want her dd to repeat her mistakes." I know other people, who did not finish college, acting like op. Screaming at their kids for a B. OP going on about her mistakes just reinforces that op has a narrow minded mind set. She can't see the big picture of what matters when you are raising a teen or any child, and hint... it is not the grades.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you’ve changed your story multiple times. From “expecting straight As” to “she’s driving this”. Nope—I don’t buy it. Each time you’ve posted you’ve tried to explain that you’re not as terrible as you sound. A spreadsheet of grades? That sounds delightful.
And you had a 2.9? So where do you get off putting that kind of pressure and expectations in your kid? She has your genes!
Why wouldn’t a 14 year old be taught to know how they are measured in life? Should she not understand in November how to get an A in her class?
Yes, I expect A’s because she can achieve these grades. It’s rote memorization and some emerging critical thinking. In sum, she’s very capable.
As for my 2.9, I clearly didn’t do well in undergrad. Too much partying. I played a lot of spades. I didn’t care about grades the first two years. Young and dumb.
To each their own, but I’m supporting my daughter with her life goals.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, oh the drama. My Dad always asked why my A- wasn’t an A in HS and I wasn’t suicidal. He was just a parent, half joking. My kid is fine, I just pushed a bit too hard.
I had a 2.9 in undergrad. I was not the greatest student in college. Embarrassing.
Again, looking for how to get her back on track. I screwed up, too much pressure too soon. Can I hear from those who’ve been there? I definitely yucked her yum.
Anonymous wrote:My kid brought home an 84 and I lost it. Since then, worse grades. I dialed in the pressure cooker. How do I dial it back? Have you been there?
I know I did wrong. I took way too many marbles out of her jar. Too much pressure too soon. She’s cracking to please me, not herself. She was fine before I intervened. I feel awful and responsible for bringing too much negativity into her life.
For the record, we expect straight A’s. She’s capable of this. It’s like I ruined her psyche.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, I hear you all. OP here.
She wants a school that’s hard to get into. She’s wanted it for various reasons on her own. I’m really not a helicopter parent. I’m here to tell her you’re aiming for x, you aren’t going to get there without y.
I’m a loving mom who wants to guide their kids in the direction and path they chose. She wants to achieve something and I’m part of guiding her there. I’m not a monster.
Not an elitist either. It’s my kid driving this train.