Parents that have no interest in knowing any of their kids friends unless it helps them professionally or socially

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It’s hard not to fall into the trap because your kid starts to notice when they aren’t invited to things. Now that she is a bit older, I can tell her that it’s not her, it’s her parents that are not being invited to parties and lunches after school wide events. We aren’t unlikeable people, but we can’t offer much socially. Having a playdate at our house means nothing because we aren’t members of a country club (no recommendation letters). Our jobs aren’t exciting- not a lot of business referrals here. We don’t have a beach house at Bethany Beach, can’t crash at our place.

But we have found our people. There are way more confident, happy people than the social climbers. And even within the social climbing cliques, there’s a weird pecking order and lots of pain and exclusion. I’m happy to not be part of that- truly. There’s something empowering with growing up, you care less. Isn’t that the goal?

I hope my kid understands when she is an adult.


The nicest parents are always at the top of the pecking order. I have a kid who became good friends with the kids of the popular crowd at a $$ school and there are plenty of parents who snub us at group events but the most successful, top of the food chain ones have always been warm and friendly. It's the layers beneath this that treat others like they don't exist. And the kids themselves are great and by high school they're the ones that do the inviting etc (and their parents treat my kid really well). It's weird and I'd rather not have to deal with any of it but we're in too deep now to move or change schools.


Yes, totally agree.
I just cannot sell my soul in the younger years. We and she will get through it fine.

To revert back to my insecure 12 year old ways is humiliating. But man, within those cliques, those lower ranked women are just so mean to each other.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to BVR!


We’ve had multiple kids go through and this hasn’t been our experience.


It’s cohort dependent. There’s a current grade that is wildly plastic.
Anonymous
Social Climber
Sycophant
Clout Chaser
Striver
Machiavellianism

I have a few friends like that, they are handy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It is not about me but I am trying to figure out what motivates parents that have zero interaction with any of their childrens best friends parents. No interaction. No hello. Nothing. The only parents they interact with are parents that can help them socially or professionally but their kids are not friends with those parents kids. What is the word I am thinking of here?


I think I would always love to get to know the parents whose kids hang out with my kids. What kind of losers count on their kids' friends to do social climbing?
Anonymous
My kid is friends with another kid. The mom was at my house and we had a hours long intimate conversation. I felt like I had made a new friend. Then at the next school event she acts like I'm invisible. Of course her house cost 10x what mine did.
She probably thinks I'm a social climber but I just enjoyed the conversation. I would have wanted to be her friend even if she was poor.
Anonymous
Maybe these people already knew each other. In our school, the proportion of parents who already know each other (even if their kids don't hang together) is dramatically high (we are not from the DMV), and those bonds are pretty strong. And even if they don't already know each other, there is definitely a type who always finds others of the same type. That's not uncommon. Sure, they might be social climbers, but they also just might be more like each other than they are like you.

in my case, I def. give off a vibe that I look down on insular people who don't like anything new or different in their lives. So I am definitely excluded. C'est la vie.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My kid is friends with another kid. The mom was at my house and we had a hours long intimate conversation. I felt like I had made a new friend. Then at the next school event she acts like I'm invisible. Of course her house cost 10x what mine did.
She probably thinks I'm a social climber but I just enjoyed the conversation. I would have wanted to be her friend even if she was poor.


Welcome to America. As an immigrant, this is how I finally get to know the culture difference. In America, people have their families nearby; they DO NOT need new friends. So they don't really become close. You can have a long chat and they said you are "fabulous" and " will def invite you for a tea". Then the next day, they are back to "Hello" and walk away. When I first came here, when people say "how are you"? I thought they meant to ask me how I am doing. But I realized, once and once again, you just say " I am great, how are you" and keep going. They DO NOT need your friendship. The society is all about superfacial pratical relationships. They have their in-laws, grandparents, aunts, high school buddies, or college sorority roommates to hang out with in New Jersey or Virginia. Why do they care about you?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It’s hard not to fall into the trap because your kid starts to notice when they aren’t invited to things. Now that she is a bit older, I can tell her that it’s not her, it’s her parents that are not being invited to parties and lunches after school wide events. We aren’t unlikeable people, but we can’t offer much socially. Having a playdate at our house means nothing because we aren’t members of a country club (no recommendation letters). Our jobs aren’t exciting- not a lot of business referrals here. We don’t have a beach house at Bethany Beach, can’t crash at our place.

But we have found our people. There are way more confident, happy people than the social climbers. And even within the social climbing cliques, there’s a weird pecking order and lots of pain and exclusion. I’m happy to not be part of that- truly. There’s something empowering with growing up, you care less. Isn’t that the goal?

I hope my kid understands when she is an adult.


The nicest parents are always at the top of the pecking order. I have a kid who became good friends with the kids of the popular crowd at a $$ school and there are plenty of parents who snub us at group events but the most successful, top of the food chain ones have always been warm and friendly. It's the layers beneath this that treat others like they don't exist. And the kids themselves are great and by high school they're the ones that do the inviting etc (and their parents treat my kid really well). It's weird and I'd rather not have to deal with any of it but we're in too deep now to move or change schools.


I have the opposite problem. My kid is super popular. Everyone wants to invite my kid to drop-off playdates. But I doon't know the family. I hope I have more time to get to know them better before drop-off playdates.
Anonymous
Such is life.
Anonymous
A few of these accounts I could have written verbatim, so this tells you that this is just one of the oddities of raising kids in this area. You find a way to manage it or move. You must be doing something right for people to go out of their way to be rude and mean. Some of these people are 50+ and are more juvenile than their own children. Trust me, as an adult, some of them aren’t people you would want to get to know. It’s so unfortunate.
Anonymous
narcissists. stay far away from them- not like you have another option, but you know what i mean.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It is not about me but I am trying to figure out what motivates parents that have zero interaction with any of their childrens best friends parents. No interaction. No hello. Nothing. The only parents they interact with are parents that can help them socially or professionally but their kids are not friends with those parents kids. What is the word I am thinking of here?


Private school isn’t for YOU to make friends.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It is not about me but I am trying to figure out what motivates parents that have zero interaction with any of their childrens best friends parents. No interaction. No hello. Nothing. The only parents they interact with are parents that can help them socially or professionally but their kids are not friends with those parents kids. What is the word I am thinking of here?


Private school isn’t for YOU to make friends.


DP. Being in a community impacts your kids' experience. It can make or break their experience. Affects the kids 100%.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My kid is friends with another kid. The mom was at my house and we had a hours long intimate conversation. I felt like I had made a new friend. Then at the next school event she acts like I'm invisible. Of course her house cost 10x what mine did.
She probably thinks I'm a social climber but I just enjoyed the conversation. I would have wanted to be her friend even if she was poor.


That's part of it. Some of them just cannot comprehend that everyone else doesn't care who they are.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It is not about me but I am trying to figure out what motivates parents that have zero interaction with any of their childrens best friends parents. No interaction. No hello. Nothing. The only parents they interact with are parents that can help them socially or professionally but their kids are not friends with those parents kids. What is the word I am thinking of here?


Private school isn’t for YOU to make friends.


You would think that. That’s how normal people think. But the whole point of all these socials at school is to meet your besties.
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