Trouble in Paradise
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Interesting letter from a school and family site WDYT?

 

Dear 11-year-old daughter,

 

You are smart, cute, witty, and have a spirit about you not usually found in a girl your age.

 

Earlier this year when you ran for student government and easily won the ?popular? vote for vice president of your elementary school, I was amazed. Fifth grade class subjects glide into your brain like you were born with them. I realize school isn?t always challenging, but I?m impressed with how you deal with the occasional boredom by getting creative. Do you know that teachers (both school and Sunday school) reach out to tell me, ?I love having your daughter in class, she has the best laugh.??

 

Your art skills are more advanced than most kids twice your age! You have an eye for color and design that makes me jealous. Your desire is to organize your world and increase the beauty around you, and you make me proud to be your mom.

 

You make friends with everyone, and everyone wants to be your friend. You are competent in both a large group of differing personalities and in a one-on-one setting with a socially slower friend. And I?ve stopped being surprised when you shine in a dance class and regularly win the ?front and center? recital spot (although being short could have something to do with that, I?ll admit.) In gymnastics you excel, and in the schoolyard monkey bars grow out of your arms!

 

You are a mother?s dream daughter.

 

HOWEVER. I?m worried. (I?m a mother after all.)

 

I?m worried about your beautiful confidence blossoming into an ugly shade of pride.

 

I want what every mother wants for her daughter: I wish you happiness in your 5th grade world and in junior high, high school, and far into college. I want you to love yourself and find profound pleasure within, never relying on others to determine the best in you, but to discover for yourself where and how you will sparkle.

 

Please cultivate empathy early. When an algebra concept is easy for your brain to attack and you realize that others might be struggling, I hope you?ll ask if you can help?instead of saying out loud. ?Gee, that was easy for me, what?s wrong with you??

 

When a friend is struggling because she doesn?t understand why her group of gal pals isn?t talking to her, I hope you can see the bigger picture and help her through the trial.

 

Because putting yourself in others? shoes is a talent that will help you the most in your life.

 

I know boys are imminent in your future. And I want you to meet and fall in love with a spouse who will love you and cherish you, and of course I want grandbabies?but not for about 15 years!

 

I promise you will meet your husband in college (not high school)! High school is for learning about yourself and for figuring out your personal style and your desires. A 16 year old may think she?s in love, but she?ll also think she?s in love at 17, and again at 18, and again and again. High school is for dating! Remember to have fun!

 

You know I?m your mother and that I worry about every tiny tidbit. Simply said, this is what I most want for you:

While knowing you are incredible with almost everything you touch,

I want you to be mindful of others first and to always remember

to stuff your pride under your pillow!

Love,

Your Mother

Re: Interesting letter from a school and family site WDYT?

  • I think it's a good message (learning empathy), but I don't know about the pride part. Confidence is great & taking a reasonable amount of pride in one'sstrengths is necessary. I definitely think that encouraging empathy is a good thing but not necessarily at the expense of one's pride. There is knowing where you excel & being happy about it. I am wondering if the girl in question is boastful about her strengths? 

    Empathy is very valuable but I think pride is too. 

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  • I agree, Betty!  The only part I didn't like was about stuffing your pride under your pillow.  I think the key is to have pride without being a bragasaurus.
  • Interesting. I think along the lines of Betty - the message is generally good except the idea that she shouldn't be proud of her abilities and accomplishments. You can be proud of yourself and still have empathy for others.

    It reminds me of a conversation I had this week with a superintendent about the value of emotional intelligence and what place it might have in education. He's huge on workforce development in 9-12 and thinks emotional intelligence is a skill we need to teach students so they can be successful in their careers. 

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  • It's an interesting letter.  I think I would feel hurt if I read this, because of my mother assuming I'd become prideful.  What strikes me most is the last sentence, about being mindful of others first and stuffing pride under the pillow.  It smacks to me too much of the "be a good girl and put others' needs before your own" way of thinking.
  • I agree with some of the other posters.  I was the smart girl whose mother always told her not to be prideful and to let others have the spotlight.  It took years to untrain myself and to accept my own power.

    I might choose another approach - with great ability comes great responsibility.  When you are lucky enough to have talents, it is your job to help others with those talents.   

  • I'm with Jessi WRT this seeming like martyrish drivel. It seems strange to me that there seems to be such a fixation on making sure girlsare equipped with empathy, and I wonder what this letter would look likehad the writer written it to her son. Would it be focused on an even playing field and avoiding pride?
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  • Generally, children learn empathy and compassion by example. Mom might be better served demonstrating the qualities she wants her children to have, than lecturing her about it in a letter.

     

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  • I was a confident kid/preteen until my mom essentially told me every time I took pride in something I did, it was unattractive and braggy.  There is a gray area between being a smug b1tch and having so self-confidence.  And parents have to be REALLY careful not to take their healthily confident kid and make them think that it's better to think they suck.
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  • imageimoan:
    I was a confident kid/preteen until my mom essentially told me every time I took pride in something I did, it was unattractive and braggy.  There is a gray area between being a smug b1tch and having so self-confidence.  And parents have to be REALLY careful not to take their healthily confident kid and make them think that it's better to think they suck.

     

    True!  Sometimes it seems like in society today any time anyone shows confidence it is considered bragging.

  • I think it is a good idea, but the word pride should have been replaced. There is such a fine line between being proud and being arrogant sometimes. There has to be something between mean girl and martyr though, but what is it?
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  • I'm just amused that the mom seems to think that college is the pinnacle of life.
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