You need to get over yourself about being welcome like a celebrity. I’m good looking and so are my kids. We were also welcomed but not like celebrities. Both my boys are very athletic. My one kid does play basketball. My kid improved, made the travel, AAU and high school teams. When I see parents from his elementary basketball team, we say hi and friendly. They probably don’t like you for some other reason. Being full of yourself might be it. |
| I meant to say when I see the kids who didn’t make the team, I’m still friendly. |
Isn't it funny when adults adopt the same status hierarchies as little kids? Like when my kids were in early elementary and there was this jockeying for social position, the kids on top were pretty much always the sporty, outgoing, physically attractive kids. That's just how it is at that age, I remember it when I was young too. Kids only have so many metrics at their disposal, and those are the obvious ones -- soccer ability, looks, confidence. As you get older you realize there's a lot more nuance. Intelligence becomes more significant and valued, as well as qualities like kindness or creativity. Puberty changes how everyone looks, plus some kids grow into features or develop good style or hygiene to make the most of what they have. People also learn that some people have too much of a good thing -- if the confident kid becomes arrogant and condescending, people like him less, for instance. As an adult, my friends are not all sporty, outgoing people. Some are, but some are quieter and more thoughtful. Some are very smart, others are artistic. What I value most are things like being easy to spend time with, being consistent and reliable, having a sense of humor, and being generally kind. But then I'll talk to elementary parents and they are like "That Lucas is really fast, what a great kid. Man Sylvia is so comfortable around adults, I love it. Logan is a natural leader, you can tell." And then ignore literally all the other kids, or any nuance about their strengths and personalities. It's like reversion to a caveman mentality. Boy hit ball hard, it go far. Boy good! Just forgetting everything you've learned about human nature in the 30 or 40 years you've been alive and return to the most basic interpretation of status and value. It's so weird. |
youre the only weird one. |
DP but it seems like you misread the PP. She didn't sound full of herself at all. They go treated "like a celebrity" because they were a new family and physically attractive. But then her son wound up on a basketball team with a group of much more skilled kids, had a horrible practice and cried, and the same parents ignored her and avoided them. Neither of those responses were based on her or her kid's actual value as a person, they were just kind of knee-jerk responses to stimuli. Her point is that both responses are shallow and not to be taken personally. BTW my kid and I are not objectively that attractive, and some people are welcoming and kind when she starts at a new school or team, but most people are not. They aren't mean, but people don't instantly gravitate to us the way they would to really physically attractive people. But in some ways I think this benefits us in the long run because what happens is that people get to know us over time and then those that choose to befriend us are clearly doing it because of something other than just being photogenic or popular. I think the good looking, athletic, outgoing kids often have a lot of offers for friendships but many are just based on kids wanting to catch some the reflected glory, which is not the best foundation for a friendship. Sometimes it's useful to skate under the radar. |
I agree with all of this. NP here. We are attractive but have a child with autism so you can imagine how quickly our social status deteriorated. However I will say that the families that stuck with us are ride or die. Truly good human beings. That’s the upside of not having a fleeting set of qualities. People care about you on a more sincere level. |
This |
| My wife and I are the lesbian moms in our grade in a liberal town in maryland. The other moms trip over themselves to make friends with the lezzies. Our kids get invited to a lot of parties and play dates even though they are fairly quiet and non athletic. |
thats.....weird |
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You put your kid in a wealthy school district then are shocked my wealthy people behavior? Surely you knew wealthy people are selective in who they marry, associate with, befriend, and same for their child. They aren’t going out of there to be nice to you if it doesn’t in some way benefit them. Surely you knew this and wanted to be part of it, and sad you are not.
Go to a Title 1 school if you just want a bunch of parents that aren’t superficial and don’t care who their kids’ are friends are (or their parents). |
| You'll feel better once you stop trying to make "mom friends". Just don't bother, OP, it's not worth the drama. |
Not really. We've been at a Title 1 school and a school with lots of wealthy families (we moved explicitly to access stronger academic programs and more high achieving peers). They both had cliquey parents. People are pack animals. It's not really even about hierarchy (although some people will try to assert that their "pack" is the best one, so that can creep in). It's just a safety in numbers thing, not much different from how kids form groups of friends in school and will then try to exclude others. Or how both kids and adults sometimes freak out when their friends make there friends -- they are afraid to be on the outside looking in. The most powerful thing you can do in the face of this is to just not care. I am very secure in who I am and in my worth (and my kid's worth). If we are not included in some pack, oh well, their loss. Partly due to having switched schools, my kid has a lot of friends outside of school through other settings. She's also got a lot of social skills from having to adjust to a new school -- above average comfort with approaching new people, introducing herself, and seeking to forge a new friendship. Those skills are more valuable than having a set group of friends, in my opinion. |
+1000 I have never understood why people assume that "moms" have some special bond. Don't the majority of adult women eventually become moms? Why would anyone assume a group that large would all want to be friends? No one ever asks my husband if he has a good group of dad friends. |
We've been in two different elementary schools and in my experience it really is different based on the grade. School 1 - the parents in my older child's grade were super snobby and the parents in my younger child's grade were super friendly. School 2 was the exact opposite - the parents in my older child's grade were really welcoming and the parents in my younger child's grade refused to engage. The PTAs are a different story - School 1 had a great PTA, School 2's is a nightmare. |
PP and yes you get it. When I was still being courted by these women one of the moms told me about a horrible tragedy that had befallen one of the families and that the little boy in our grade “seemed left out. Unfortunately he doesn’t seem to have made friends with our boys.” *shrug* as if it would be unheard of for a mother to encourage her 7 year old son to invite over or be friendly to a classmate who had something tragic happen. Just one of those things! He hasn’t made friends with “our boys”! I realized then that something was off. |