NP. I agree that parents should instruct their children not to discuss social events at school. But parents should also teach their kids that they will not be invited to every event, and that’s okay. Frankly it’s not even clear to me that the “excluded” child is upset. It’s the mother who seems to be taking all this very badly. |
It isn't that they think “everyone” should be invited, but they think they should be. I’m sure they don’t care about the others that weren’t invited |
Lady, a neighbor observing that parents of her kids friends have formed a neighborhood clique that also results creates an exclusive socializing environment for the kids, and that some of the parents are oblivious to this is not criticizing the parents. Some people are not going to notice this, especially if they’re included in the clique. PP is just taking steps to make sure that her daughter can still be included. You keep posting that your younger child is included by the much older children of your friends. Do you think that your child is the actual friend of those kids, or that they just include them because their parents told them too? This happens frequently, especially in neighborhood cliques. There are countless posts about neighborhood cliques and being excluded. You’re just justifying your own actions. |
Ok. And you can fully expect some parents who also doesn’t subscribe to social norms, like you, might have something to say about it. You were warned. |
I’ve never encountered a parent that demanded they or the child be included in something when they weren't otherwise invited. Not normal behavior and no excuse for it |
The mother said her piece and then has been silent. Not sure why OP isn’t picking up on her cues that she is no longer interested in a group that didn’t include her kid. This kid found out about a party and said something to their parent. What exactly did that kid do wrong? |
No, my child is not included by the much older children of my friends. They're much older! My child is included by my child's friends. I do not expect or demand that their much younger mothers include me. Why would they? If the daughter is friends with the other girls, it's perfectly appropriate to reach out and coordinate. The other parents likely welcome it. If the daughter is not friends with the other girls, and the mom is not friends with the other moms, then both are better served finding their own friends. |
| I hear you OP. We’re dealing with a similar situation in my family. My DD’s friend had a sleep over and my DD wasn’t invited. She knows she can’t be invited to everything and while disappointed, she gets it. That said, the girl who had the sleep over made it a point of letting my DD know she had a party and my child wasn’t invited. She was rather obnoxiously about it. It was hurtful. Parents aren’t always aware of their kids behavior. Sometimes there is more to the story than “we can’t invite everyone”. |
Ok? OP did and is asking for advice. Sounds like you have none to give. If the upset parent was the one posting people would rightly tell her how to manage her own behavior but that’s not the situation. The lesson for OP is to watch what she says to and in front of her kids to avoid these situations because people are unpredictable. Is this really news to you? |
Kids use these parties as weapons. They threaten to uninvite or not invite people all the time. They use this to their full advantage. Pretending this was all innocent is very naive. |
These replies speak to our experience. My kid's friends with a group of kids whose moms are close. The moms are nice enough. And they and their kids do things that some could read as pointedly exclusionary. Like letting their kids call mine from every get together they all do. Or having conversations about ideas I've brought up individually with one of them and then deciding how to move forward together. It's like they're living by committee. And that influences how their kids sometimes interact with mine. For us, we go when we're invited and we don't sweat it when we're not, especially since my kid says they don't care. Kiddo has a broad range of friends, so they are able to dismiss it. I know that's not true for all kids. OP isn't responsible for another person's reaction. And the group she's in probably does do things that are strangely committee-like to people like me, exclusionary to more sensitive types. |
I don’t think anyone really did anything terribly wrong. Yes, the kid shouldn’t have talked about the event at school, but apparently we’re discussing 6 year olds here. Hurt feelings are a part of life and this could be a teachable moment for the excluded child. Instead his mother is making it worse. |
This, and it could also be that the mom's kid is more sensitive than yours and more upset/bothered by some of the social bragging and competitiveness that the friend group's kids may engage in. She may be more annoyed by the exclusion of her kid simply because it is causing more problems for her at home, if her kid is complaining a lot about not being part of that group, not wanting to go to school, etc. I think OP is perceiving this as being entirely about this woman wanting to break into their friend group and I think it's highly unlikely that's the case. The behavior really indicates this is creating issues with her kid and she resents the moms for creating this problem. The thing with the moms attending the gym class makes this obvious -- I guarantee this mom is not mad she didn't get to hang out at gym class with these other women. But instead, her kid came home and said "hey all the moms came to gym class today but you weren't there! why didn't you come, I felt left out," and this mom was like wtf I didn't even know this was something people were doing today. |
But the mom is just choosing to no longer interact with OP and the moms in this group. How does that make it worse? It sounds like OP doesn't want to socialize with this woman (or have her kid socialize with this woman's son), but she also needs the more to be friendly to her. OP's hurt feelings over the mom's silent treatment are also a "part of life" that OP is having trouble dealing with. So much so that she started this thread and posted repeatedly to defend herself and attack this woman. Who cares? There are also people I am not friends with who don't speak to me, it's never occurred to me that this is a problem. |
The proper response to the last example is, “Sometimes moms go to the gym together. Sometimes they don’t. Just like sometimes you play tag and sometimes you don’t.” The kids are six. |