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Dialogues · Heated

“My grades aren't everything.”

The college-prep era's signature defense. Often a deflection from a slipping grade — sometimes a genuine identity claim. Worth taking the second meaning seriously even if the first is true.

Line art of a teen at a desk surrounded by books, looking out a window, soft afternoon light
For ages
13–1516–18
Topics
School & GradesIdentity & SelfCareer & Future
Family context
Affluent/High SpendingStrict Household
I.
The scene

What's happening.

Progress report comes home. Three Bs where there used to be As. You bring it up, calmly. Your 16-year-old says flat: “Mom, my grades aren't everything. Stop.”

II.
The instinctive version

What we usually say — and why it backfires.

Parent

They are everything when you're applying to colleges in two years.

Teen

Maybe I won't go to college.

Parent

Oh, please. Don't be ridiculous.

Teen

I'm not. Just because YOU went doesn't mean I have to.

III.
The better version

What works — and why.

Parent

You're right that grades aren't everything. Tell me what else is on your plate this term — I want to hear it from you, not the gradebook.

Teen

I'm in jazz ensemble. I'm taking AP Bio AND AP English which is a lot. And I've been editing the lit mag.

Parent

That's a lot. The Bs make more sense now. Is the load actually working for you, or is something dropping you don't want to be dropping?

Teen

I think it's working. Lit mag matters to me more than the B in calc.

Parent

Okay. I trust that. If the B in calc becomes a C, let's revisit — not as punishment, as a check-in.

IV.
Memorize these

Key phrases to reach for in the moment.

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