But it sounds like the other parents did feel it was necessary. Do you think it's possible that something more was going on and that having a mediated conversation with the school counselor might have helped you all get on the same page? What I'm hearing is that they were trying to communicate and you shut it down. Also you are describing this as a "grudge" which doesn't sound accurate to me. It doesn't sound like the other parents are holding a grudge, but more making a choice regarding their child based on the info they have. There was some kind of conflict, they attempted to solve it with you and you shut down further discussion, and now they've chosen to distance. It sounds like your families have different approaches to things with your kids and that this is a perfectly reasonable choice to make. These kids are still pretty young -- 8 is an age where it's hard for kids to have friendships without at least some parental involvement/collaboration. |
In attempts to be anonymous, I was trying to be vague but I realized that it sounded like I never even spoke to the parents so I added more detail. From our side, there is nothing more to the story. Girls were friends. Then the girl stopped talking to my daughter and excluded her so she basically dropped my child as a friend. My daughter was upset over this. School has counseling sessions. It is more like a class during advisory. When I spoke to both the teacher and counselor, I actually told them they seems to be making the situation worse, not better by involving parents and that is when the teacher said they never contacted the other parents. It was them. I guess the girl had a version she told her parents where she may have gotten in trouble for being mean to my daughter. |
| The telling line here is the last one “I was never friends with the mom.” In my book if our kids are friends, then I’m going to be friendly to you. Even if you’re not my style or we have nothing in common. I’m not going to snub some lady if our kids like each other. You should have acted like you cared about this situation even if deep down you knew it was silly. Hear them out, smile and say you hope the girls can work it out. Instead you basically said this family doesn’t matter. |
You are missing info. The other girl did not wake up one morning and decide to start randomly not talking to your daughter and excluding her. Something prompted this. You might not care what it was, but there was an inciting event. That event might involve your daughter being less than perfect. Or it may be no one's fault but help explain the other girl's behavior. Once my daughter was accused by another child of "excluding." I was concerned about this so spoke to my kid, the teacher, and the other child's parents. What came out was that the other child was trying to force my kid to play with her by saying "if you don't play with me, no one will" and then she would cry. My daughter felt guilty when this happened so she would play with the girl, but felt resentful especially because this meant she could not play with other kids. Over time that resentment led to her engaging in excluding. So it was complicated. My daughter *was* excluding, and was not acceptable. But the other child was being manipulative and trying to coerce my kid into being friends with her (and only her). It was a dysfunctional situation and both kids needed to learn better ways to deal with conflict. You assumed your daughter's version of events was complete and correct, and you are assuming that the other girl must have told her parents' a version that wasn't true. In reality, both girls likely told an abbreviated version that omitted details that made them look bad. That's why it's helpful to compare notes and talk it out, which is what the other parents wanted to do. By refusing to do that, you've made them wary of you and made it harder if there are ever future issues between the girls. So they didn't want to bring their daughter to your daughter's birthday because it probably seemed like a can of worms. You think their daughter was 100% at fault for the conflict, their daughter is saying that's not true, it's understandable they wouldn't be eager to bring their daughter to your house. I suspect no matter what we say, you will dig in and insist you are right and they are wrong. Well, there you go. Your daughter will also learn this way of behaving, and will be unyielding and noncommunicative with friends when they have issues and try to solve them through talking. Expect this scenario to repeat itself in different ways throughout your life and hers. |
| I am not friends with people who refuse to have an adult conversation with me about something that concerns us both. |
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Sounds like you were dismissive of the mom’s concerns. Whether that was justified in this situation, no one knows. But if you cared about maintaining good relations, it would have served you better to be more diplomatic.
I’d just ignore the whole thing at this point. Be friendly as far as it concerns you. The mom may or not warm back up to you. It won’t be the last time you run across this type of situation (interpersonal difficulties between the kids, making things awkward with a fellow parent). So buckle up. |
| OP sounds like a dismissive monster |
All of this |
You missed your chance to reach out |
I am not friends with the mom. I was not friends with her before and don’t really care about being friends with her now or ever. Even when our kids were super close before, she was not the type I would want to hang out together just the two moms and two daughters. It has always been drop off only. This girl is one of my child’s closest friends and the girls have made up and once again very good friends. I don’t want the girls’ friendship to suffer because this mom has a grudge against me. |
But she wasn't asking to go out for drinks and gab about your sex lives. She requested a meeting with the school to discuss a conflict between your kids that was apparently significant enough to upset both of them at home. It's fine to not be friends with the parents of your kid's friends. But you can't just not engage. You can't just keep it "drop off only" when the kids are close and dealing with interpersonal conflict. You need to think of other parents like coworkers. You don't have to be buddies, but you can't just ignore a request from a colleague for a meeting to discuss a project you are both involved in. The girls' relationship is your joint project. You can't just nope out and assume your colleague (the other girl's mom) is going to be cool with it. Pretend we live in a society. |
I learned later the girl had a formal complaint logged against her by a family the prior year. This is a small school. While I don’t want to make this a big deal, I heard from others how this girl use to bully another girl. That family isn’t so cordial. |
You sound very immature. The whole inability to grasp why you made a mistake with the mother and your childish insistence “she’s NOT my friend!!!!” lol. We get it lady. But when people’s children are close (at a young age) and you carpool - you are friendly acquaintances…and you act accordingly. |
Well now I think you're a troll. The story keeps changing. So actually the girl has harmed other girls too? But you are mad the girl didn't come to your child's birthday party because... why? You are either not real or just allergic to taking responsibility for your own behavior. I'm hoping not real. |
I mean, they're 8. Do you have any recollection of friend dynamics when you were 8? I got glasses when I was 8 and some rando girl in my class branded me a dork and that was enough for my BF at the time to drop me. I would have accepted the meeting though. |