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Parent Emeritus
Leopard can't change his spots - something I find amusing
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<blockquote data-quote="SuZir" data-source="post: 604775" data-attributes="member: 14557"><p>You are right, difficult child was just being honest. And he really is quite good in interviews so he even put it nicely. Said he would be disappointed with himself if he could not play well enough to earn the number one spot and even said his competitors inside the team are also very good and have played well in pre-season games. </p><p></p><p>This league's competitiveness level is somewhere between our countries number one and number two leagues and that is why it could be a good fit for difficult child in this point of his development. The offers he had from our first league didn't promise much playing time and level of our second league is bit too low to help him develop optimally. And let's face it, difficult child wants and needs to play, not watch others to do so. If he can't get a lot of playing time in this team, he will likely not stay there whole season, but try to get a transfer to some other place. And this team didn't hire difficult child to sit and watch, they too expect him to take that number one spot.</p><p></p><p>difficult child truly is very independent in some ways and has lots of courage to go and try, even though one would think that for a person with social difficulties leaving home to go far away and to place there you don't understand the word of the language would seem impossible and scary. He just doesn't think it that way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SuZir, post: 604775, member: 14557"] You are right, difficult child was just being honest. And he really is quite good in interviews so he even put it nicely. Said he would be disappointed with himself if he could not play well enough to earn the number one spot and even said his competitors inside the team are also very good and have played well in pre-season games. This league's competitiveness level is somewhere between our countries number one and number two leagues and that is why it could be a good fit for difficult child in this point of his development. The offers he had from our first league didn't promise much playing time and level of our second league is bit too low to help him develop optimally. And let's face it, difficult child wants and needs to play, not watch others to do so. If he can't get a lot of playing time in this team, he will likely not stay there whole season, but try to get a transfer to some other place. And this team didn't hire difficult child to sit and watch, they too expect him to take that number one spot. difficult child truly is very independent in some ways and has lots of courage to go and try, even though one would think that for a person with social difficulties leaving home to go far away and to place there you don't understand the word of the language would seem impossible and scary. He just doesn't think it that way. [/QUOTE]
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Leopard can't change his spots - something I find amusing
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