HuntingNet.com Forums - View Single Post - Who lets kids skip school to hunt?
View Single Post
Old 05-31-2007 | 05:12 PM
  #9  
SwampCollie's Avatar
SwampCollie
Nontypical Buck
 
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 4,420
Likes: 0
From: Where the ducks don't come no more
Default RE: Who lets kids skip school to hunt?

ORIGINAL: Tikka 30-06

my parents let me skip as long as my grades are good
Same here. I have been out of college for three years now, and in hindsight, I can offer some advice as a fresh out of school adult.

Don't let your kids cut school if they are struggling, and don't "cut a deal" with them either...stand your ground. Keep in mind that your kids are probably skipping school anyway to hunt (I used to skip school to hunt with my principal, who was skipping work, and his secretary, who happened to be my neighbor was covering for us both).

School is important, and if you raised your kids right, and they have their priorieties right, then they won't ask to skip school if they have something important to do at school that day. There is no worse lesson you can teach your kids than the one that its ok to stand up responsibilities just because you finally have a NE wind and a cold front is moving through. That lesson will stick, and pretty soon it won't matter what the wind is...they will cut class. Hunting is addictive, just like a drug...and cutting class to hunt is just as easy. Take it from me...because I went from a 3.8 cumulative to barely graduating with a 3.3 when I started hunting everyday my senior year. That decision probably cost me $40K in both starting job salary and in potential scholarships to grad school (even though I decided not to go). Don't get me wrong, its nobodies fault but my own. My parents NEVER let me cut school. But Dad did say that if I ever got straight A's (even just once) in high school...he'd take me out west to elk hunt. My Dad just turned 57, and I doubt we will ever make it out west together...so plan trips...it is important to spend time together...but don't let it become more important than work/class/family/responsibilites.
SwampCollie is offline  
Reply