No, but we do owe it to our kids to teach them strong social skills. In order to do that we need to develop our own social skills. I say this as someone whose mother was difficult and lonely. |
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Some of the recent PPs really nail this awkward dynamic I’ve been on both sides of. I’ve been the “core” friend extending the obligatory “oh hey you should totally join this activity the rest of us have already planned and coordinated based on each other’s schedules and interests” invite to somebody on the fringes only because there’s no polite way NOT to include her.
I’ve also been the “fringe” friend on the receiving end of these invitations and it’s absolutely an awkward no-win situation - either you accept knowing they don’t really want you there, or you decline and then it’s your own fault if you feel left out. The answer here is to accept that these aren’t your people and to cultivate other friendships. Which does suck when it means kids can’t form organic friendships because the parents are pulling all the strings. But what are you gonna do. |
And one of those social skills is being considerate of others. |
Ok, Mom. I’ll figure out how to make friends in this inconsiderate world all by myself. I know you tried your best. Bye. |
If you're still hanging out with the same friends you had as a teen ager, you don't have as finely tuned social skills as you think you do. What would you do if you had to move for work? Have you ever considered what it might be like for someone new to the neighborhood? You have a stunning lack of empathy so I would guess not. |
Because we don’t talk at all and I talked to them daily. That’s how it works. No one is pretending to like her or not like her. |
I have many close friends that are new to our neighborhood and school. Many. But they make effort and we have a friendship that is a two way street of reaching out and making the effort. |
What exactly is going on at your home that this is a concern? Why would you even worry about being sued? Are you the "cool" mom handing out beers to underage kids? |
You keep bringing it back to you and your friends. Can your kid have a friend whose parent doesn't care to be your friend? |
Ding ding ding. Lock it up, we didn't need the other 20 pages. |
Yes. Sometimes I may choose to host my children’s friends. My child may hate my friends’ kids. Even so, I may have parties with my friends. My friends’ kids may be there. That may take up space on my kids’ calendars, and that is also ok. |
You would think b/c it was obvious on page 1 when OP said the mom was mad her kid wasn't invited and then OP went on and on about her friends and how this mom never says hi to her. This is why she can't understand at all what the other mom's issue is. |
That and whatever OP's unresolved mommy issues are. |
But actually you’re wrong. I’m very aware how that comes off and I’ll start a new text saying “Does anyone want to meet for ice cream w the kids?” so she doesn’t feel like an outsider or late invite and people chime in as if they are hearing it for the first time. I mentioned that. As I mentioned, I have invited this woman to dozens of things over the years and she has never initiated one time and more times than not doesn’t even rsvp or respond. I’m sorry but she’s in no position to be upset if she’s not included one time. No one gets invited to everything. |
| People need to learn how to make their own friends. Who cares if you’re not in the “clique” even if there is one. Find your own group. |