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Old 12-19-2006, 11:32 AM   #1
Nephythys
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Originally Posted by tracilicious View Post
Everyone is born with a natural desire to learn and succeed. It is often driven out of them by the conditional acceptance of those around them. With support and unconditional love, I believe every child will do their best in everything they want to do.

I see- well, I disagree and take some exception to your generality- but it's not worth getting any further into it.
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Old 12-19-2006, 12:01 PM   #2
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Originally Posted by Nephythys View Post
I see- well, I disagree and take some exception to your generality- but it's not worth getting any further into it.

Ohh, nice use of the passive aggressive debate technique!

I get to make my point but you don't get a chance to respond because I have already deemed it not worth getting any further into.

Well done
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Old 12-19-2006, 12:05 PM   #3
Nephythys
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Ohh, nice use of the passive aggressive debate technique!

I get to make my point but you don't get a chance to respond because I have already deemed it not worth getting any further into.

Well done
*sigh*

If I had chosen to respond as I initially wanted to I would have been upset and emotional- so I stepped back- and I still get grief.

I support and love my son deeply- I encourage him all the time- he hates school. He has NO desire to succeed and learn. I struggle constantly and the idea that a kid will simply bloom into that kind of self motivated person with the right amount of love and support is insulting to me. As if somehow I am just not supporting and loving him unconditionally enough- so instead of getting into that mess I simply said I disagree and take exception to some of her theories.

The hassle is not worth the effort.

On edit- I know her comment was not a personal barb directed at me- hence my decision to refrain from reacting to it. That is not passive agressive- it was being prudent in my response.

Last edited by Nephythys : 12-19-2006 at 12:32 PM.
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Old 12-19-2006, 03:54 PM   #4
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Originally Posted by Nephythys View Post
I support and love my son deeply- I encourage him all the time- he hates school. He has NO desire to succeed and learn.

I'm glad that you realize that I wasn't trying to insult you. Hating school, and having no desire to succeed and learn are two very different things. School is a destructive environment for many kids. There is no such thing as an ideal situation, or a perfect way to parent, so perhaps we should leave this particular area of discussion.

As for the rest of the competition comments, I'm not against competition. I do find it unnecessary for small kids. If a kid is of an age where they can understand winning and losing and choose to participate in a sport then I think that is great. Sports are lots of fun. I'm not sure why a four year old should be pushed to compete though. It seems odd that competition plays such a small part of adult life (personal competition, not business competition) yet we try and put our kids in front of it constantly.

Life throws so many disappointments at us constantly. I find it pointless to set kids up for those sorts of things. They happen naturally. You may as well say, "Kids at school are going to make fun of your big nose anyways. I'm going to start making fun of it myself now so that it isn't a big deal when the other kids do it."

There WILL be times when the ice cream truck passes by before you can get your money out, or when another kid has something that they don't, it just happens. Kids don't have to be taught how to handle disappointment by us setting it up for them. They'll have more than enough opportunities by just growing up.

I probably should have learned by now not to get involved in discussions on kids with people whose thoughts are so entrenched in mainstream thinking. (I don't mean that as an insult, but none of you seem to be willing to think outside the box.) In my particular circle of parenting friends, none of us punish or reward or engage our kids in competition (they're all only three or four) and they are all excellent kids that are faced with disappointment and handle it pretty gracefully.

I've known many teens and adults who are sore losers yet they've been competing all their lives.
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Old 12-19-2006, 04:03 PM   #5
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Originally Posted by tracilicious View Post
(I don't mean that as an insult, but none of you seem to be willing to think outside the box.)
The way I think is shaped in majority by the way I was raised. And seeing as I grew up never having been shielded from competition and possess what I consider to be a healthy attitude toward competition, winning, and losing, I am forced to conclude that exposure to competition isn't what produces sore losers and arrogant winners. Rather, it's attitude toward competition that shapes it. Therefore, I simply can't agree with you that pointedly avoiding competition is a necessary component in raising an adjusted child. I'm not arguing that it's detremental to do so, but based on my experience, I see no compelling reason to take that step.

As I've said in other dicussions, I don't put much stock in whether something is mainstream or not mainstream. If you consider my conclusions "not outside the box", I couldn't care less. I strive to come to my conclusions independent of the box. Sometimes they fall within it, sometimes they don't. Oh well.
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Old 12-19-2006, 04:24 PM   #6
Strangler Lewis
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Originally Posted by tracilicious View Post

In my particular circle of parenting friends, none of us punish or reward or engage our kids in competition (they're all only three or four) and they are all excellent kids that are faced with disappointment and handle it pretty gracefully.
Let's get down to cases here. Are we talking JW? Waldorf? Single mothers in housing projects? I assume not the latter, though when I did live among the projects during law school, I saw a lot of well-adjusted looking little kids of whom little was expected and who seemed to be handling their lot well. Then they grew up.

If Waldorf, the Waldorf parents I know obsess, worry and fetishize their child's development more than any other parents I've met.

I can't really say whether I agree with you without a sense of what kind of disappointments you expect your kids to be able to endure. Knowing a little something of your background, I am suspecting that they are fairly minimal. The sense I get from your post is not that the kids are learning to handle disappointment well; it's that they are learning that there is not much in this worldy world worth aspiring to or being excited about. (In the Enneagram, that's a type 5--the unenlightened Buddha. It's what I test as.)

I will agree that competition and performances for three and four year-olds are to be avoided. They don't get it, and it's an f*****' bore for the adults. A photo op to be sure, but not worth the weekly shlep.
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