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Old 06-23-2008, 12:48 PM   #1
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Mother knows best, share your wisdom

We all wish our kids the best and have been doing our best to help them. But, do they end up where we thought they would, e.g., a right place in school, a dream college, an exciting career, or a fulfilling life? If you could do the parenting all over again and would do something differently, what’s the cue that you missed early on? Whether you are a mother of a 10-year old or a 50-year old, you surely have some wisdom to share in a few sentences or so. With that wisdom we may then best channel the kids’ energy and ours to their potentials. We don’t need the experts to tell us what to do. We the parents collectively know the best (dads included). We were kids too, and we might wish our parents did something differently.
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Old 06-23-2008, 12:54 PM   #2
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Good question....
I don't know how to do things differently. I am very proud of my daughter who graduated HS at the top of her class and is at an Ivy League school-- just finished her first year. She did really well first year in school (4.0) declared her major already (art) and will be an editor of a local newspaper. Her school friends are wonderful. We like them a whole lot better than her HS friends, with whom she is still sort of friends with, but not a huge amount. But I know that she smokes (cigarettes and.... I am afraid). I know that she drinks (in moderation-- has never thrown up and doesn't stink when she gets home. Doesn't drive, so not an issue. Friends don't have cars, so not an issue-- thank god.) and I am pretty sure she is getting a fake ID. So, I feel that we did do some things right, but we must have done some things wrong as well..... I don't know what I should have done to avoid some of this stuff that is self-destructive.
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Old 06-23-2008, 01:32 PM   #3
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Parents of ordinary kids may have as much or more wisdom than those of smart kids. If your kids are where you expected them to be, please share your secrets as well. Your D is smart, franglisg, but you must have a secret or two, because she can keep her eyes on the ball (straight A and good friends) even though she does things that could distract her (lots of fun though). Please share.
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Old 06-23-2008, 01:37 PM   #4
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I would have done the required thirty hours of driving, with a parent in the car, back when gas was cheap.

If I had known I was raising the top Latin student in the world (OK one of two) maybe I should have let him watch kids' videos in foreign languages or
language learning videos. Why wasn't I warned?
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Old 06-23-2008, 03:11 PM   #5
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Proud parent of an "ordinary" kid here. Not the top anything in the world or even this country. Don't wish I had done anything different really. I did the best I could, just as my parents did. I wasn't concerned about making sure either of my kids reached their "potential" just as my parents weren't.

Just went by the old Golden Rule..treat everyone the way you want to be treated.

Worked for me and mine just fine.
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Old 06-23-2008, 03:31 PM   #6
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Quote:
If I had known I was raising the top Latin student in the world
As Sam Bernstein said about his son, "If I'd known he would grow up to be Leonard Bernstein, I'd have made him practice more!"
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Old 06-23-2008, 04:21 PM   #7
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My kids' high school loves to be on that Newsweek Top 100 list, so they push AP classes like crazy. We signed my son up for WAY too many AP classes-all on the recommendations of teachers and counselors. His weighted GPA is fine, but when schools start asking for unweighted-yikes. With the two daughters coming up, we are going to be much more cautious about the AP classes.
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Old 06-23-2008, 05:07 PM   #8
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One thing I am glad we did is start early signing our children up for interesting sounding experiences which they attended not knowing any one (e.g., Zoo Day Camp at age 4) and continuing that throughout elementary/middle and high school, letting them make the choices on which such camps/activities/summer programs as they got older. Although both children fall on the introversion end of the personality scale, both think nothing of jumping into such experiences now and are becoming very competent and independent young adults. (One reason we made that choice is that my parents always made sure I had a friend or cousin signed up with me for summer camps, etc., and when I got older, it was excruciatingly hard for me to do new things alone and sometimes I'd skip things that sounded great because I wouldn't know anyone.)
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Old 06-23-2008, 05:11 PM   #9
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I would have spent less time worrying to myself about why my older son isn't more like me.

My younger one is just like me, bless his heart. Now that's cause for worry.
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Old 06-23-2008, 05:17 PM   #10
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If you have a gymnast and the gym wants to have them take lots of hours of classes at a very young age, do it. Gymnastics is a race against time....you want to get them as far along as you can before they have the sense to be scared!
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Old 06-23-2008, 06:10 PM   #11
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Don't bleed on the carpet.
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Old 06-23-2008, 06:11 PM   #12
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Or leave nail polish out where 2 year olds can paint their toenails on the carpet!
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Old 06-23-2008, 07:04 PM   #13
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If I had it to do again, I'd somehow make sure my kids kept eating a variety of food. They got pickier and pickier each year, especially the older one. He would eat anything when he was three.

I'd have stamped my feet more about math acceleration too.
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Old 06-23-2008, 07:42 PM   #14
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I would have focused more on being the kind of person I hoped they'd become rather than trying to teach them to become that kind of person.
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Old 06-23-2008, 10:32 PM   #15
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I would have cautioned the first child against overextending herself and trying to do everything in the world all at once. Wait, I did caution her. She didn't listen and was often grouchy from lack of sleep. Oh well, she survived and so did we.

Second child was also an overachiever but got along quite well on less sleep.

# 3 and 4 are less ambitious, thank goodness.

So, words of wisdom? How about "Lessons will be repeated until they are learned." And that goes for both children and parents!
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