Doing something difficult. Helplessness when others simply learn.
This was the first sentence of an email I wrote to Mr. Klee almost a year ago, asking for help. A sentence that best described our son's situation and with which I wanted to start our last attempt to maybe find help after all.
Now it is time to say "Thank you!".
Thank you for recognizing our son who had disappeared behind a mountain of self-doubt, fears and failures. We experience a teenager who finally gets a picture of what abilities he has and gradually regains his self-motivation and self-confidence.
In Mr. Klee, he has not only found a good tutor who encourages and challenges him in his mathematical abilities, but also a life coach who, with his emphatic and sensitive manner, really wants to understand his counterpart.
"Thinking outside the box" and "grasping" are wanted and the lessons go far beyond just imparting knowledge.
Thank you for simply allowing us to be parents again. "Learning" and "school" are no longer the topics that determine and burden our everyday lives.
Our cry for help has reached the right addressee.
Thank you!
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