BCDisneyFanatic
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2007
- Messages
- 1,604
I never had been....until I had kids.
Wait until your kids are in school. You worry about whether you chose the right school for them and are you scarring them for life with some of the choices you make for them.
Then you worry about whether they've turned in their homework and stuff like that when they get a bit older. Then they get to high school and you worry about every little test and project because you're worried their grades aren't good enough to get into the school they want.
Nope. I don't worry about whether I've chosen the right school for them (and my oldest DD10 has been in 4 different elementary schools). I firmly believe that if you give your kids a good foundation and support, they will thrive in any environment. If I felt they weren't being challenged enough at school, I would be proactive and do something about it...not worry!
Every choice I've made in life has had positive and negative consequences. I'm sure that will be the case with my kids. However, as long as I feel I am making the right decisions for me and my family at the time, I don't see any point in second-guessing them. I try to work with what I've got...not worry about what might have been.
As for their homework...well, that's their responsibility (even though they are only 8 and 10). If they don't do it, there will be consequences at school, and then I will instill consequences at home when their grades drop. Since that hasn't been a problem yet, I'm not going to waste my time worrying about it.
I am also not going to worry about them getting into the 'right' university...I've known lots of people who haven't gotten into their first (or second...or third) choices, and have gone on to live very successful, happy lives. I hope they will get into their first-choice school, but learning early on that they can't have everything in life they want isn't a bad thing either.
If one of my kids was exhibiting signs of being seriously ill, this would cause me to worry. Homework and school choices? Not so much.