Anonymous wrote:My daughter is a senior and every adult she encounters asks her where she wants to go to college, how her applications are going or what her SAT score is. Please give these kids a break. They have enough on their plate. They don’t need to be asked about college at every casual encounter.
And, could people with more social savvy than I have share a good response she can use to deflect these questions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
What an incredibly rude resonse. What boundary? Polite conversation? Not doing your kids any favors if you teach them to behave like this.
The question is incredibly rude too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
What an incredibly rude resonse. What boundary? Polite conversation? Not doing your kids any favors if you teach them to behave like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
Way to raise a socially awkward and off-putting kid!
+ 1
I would laugh in someone's face if they tried this.
Being a member of society means learning how to make polite small talk. No one actually cares where you're going to college. It's just something to say. Idle interest. Same as "how's your day going?" It's not like we actually want to hear a truthful answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
Way to raise a socially awkward and off-putting kid!
+ 1
I would laugh in someone's face if they tried this.
Being a member of society means learning how to make polite small talk. No one actually cares where you're going to college. It's just something to say. Idle interest. Same as "how's your day going?" It's not like we actually want to hear a truthful answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
Way to raise a socially awkward and off-putting kid!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
Way to raise a socially awkward and off-putting kid!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
This is one tactic, but that is the most socially awkward way of handling the situation. You could easily deflect the question, or even say nearly the same thing in a more neutral way, then the kid can shift to either something the kid wants to talk about (clubs? movies? Sports?), or ask the questioner about their college experience o kids if they want. If an adult keeps bringing up the subject and not taking social cues, a more curt 'I don't talk about it" might be warranted. But you don't need to jump straight to "enforcing boundaries" when people are just trying (albeit poorly) to make conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Team OP. So many ways to talk to a teen without grilling them about their college apps. Some folks on DCUM could stand to work on social skills.
True, there are many other ways to talk to a teen. And I personally never ask about college plans. But I can't stop other people from asking. Like it or not, they will. So OP's kid needs to figure out an answer because the question is inevitable.
NP. True, and she should learn to enforce boundaries.
“I don’t talk about it.”