hulagirl87
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2006
- Messages
- 4,646
Outside of school she volunteers at our local Y in the child care center (hopefully will be hired on as an actual job), and takes a dance class. Neither of those have led to any outside friendships though. She just really wants a group of friends to hang out with, or even just one "bestie". someone she can confide in, gossip with, go to the mall with, etc. She's so hung up on this and I tell her that sometimes it takes a while to find your person. We have a family friend that struggled in high school and didn't really make friends until her junior year. I feel like school has become too much socializing and not enough learning. I would love to send her to school, have her do her work and come home. But she is so hung up on who might not like her or who is saying something bad about her. I never would have imagined this to be a thing. She is such a fun and amazing kid. There is so much pressure to fit in and be "cool".Back up- besides the part where her problem with the school is how the social aspect is going there, homeschooling doesn't mean no social situations. Are you on Facebook? There are a million homeschool parent groups - join some and look around. Look for ones that are local and see what the local homeschoolers are doing. You might find out there are co-ops, sports teams, meet-ups all over the place. Some locations there are fewer in-person events, but homeschoolers have online gatherings, she might find new friends all around the world through a D&D club or a film class. Have her take a community ed exercise class, community theater, painting class, join a martial art, or just get a part-time job. See what programs your library offers. Maybe volunteer at a local animal shelter, a food pantry, something with younger kids? (something in her interest set)
Many homeschool families find their kids better socially adapted outside of the "system" - is it really natural to be segregated by age? If social activity is what is holding you back, think about how common it is that people hear high school is NOT what the real world is like. Public school is not for socializing, it is a convenient way to have children learn when parents either aren't sure what to offer them or don't have the time. The socials aspect (which for the bulk of kids seems to malfunction more often than it goes well) is an unfortunate side effect of putting too many immature people in one place at the same time.
I tell her that high school is a puzzle and right now she is a piece that just doesn't fit. It's hard forcing all these people together. I had friends in high school, but don't talk to them any more. The friends I have now are ones that I have chosen from either work jobs or mom groups. I encourage her that she will be able to pick her people once she is out of school, but every day is just a struggle for her and it's hard to see her struggling so much.