| The whole inclusion thing started out well but has morphed into teaching kids to make themselves smaller for someone else’s happiness and it has taught other kids that if the have an “excuse” for their behavior, there will be no consequences. |
This is a much smaller problem than someone inviting every girl in the class to a party but 1 or 2. Which is just mean. No you don't have to include people you dislike. But occasionally that also means just having a smaller party in general. This is life and having social skills means you navigate these things all the time. As an adult, if I am having a party and one of my friend's is dating a guy I hate, I still have to invite the jerk-bf to the party to stay friends with my friend. OR: I can have a smaller gathering without partners. This is similar. Goodness some of you are hopeless in social situations. |
Are you 8 years old? No you are not. Expecting kids to have the emotional bandwidth of an adult is unfair. Expecting girls to make themselves uncomfortable to make others comfortable is just a continuation of the outdated concept that women must always be kind even at their own expense. This kid doesn’t like these kids. Your comparison is not valid because you like your friend and accept the boyfriend as a package deal. This girl has nothing to gain by inviting these kids. Yes she should not be unkind to the kids at school but she does not need to modify her once a year celebration for the comfort of others. |
Sometimes being a part of a strong community involves dealing with people who are not your favorites. This is a life lesson. |
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Please don't leave just two girls out. This actually happened to my child in 4th grade. A birthday girl invited all the girls in the class except for mine and one other, including my daughter's two best friends. And the mom posted pics on instagram for everyone to see! I had two other moms tell me they had no idea my daughter wasn't invited and that they thought it was cruel. Nobody blamed the daughter, we all blamed the mom.
That said, girls are in middle school now and the daughter definitely takes after her mom. She's mean. |
This (leaving out just one or two) was bad behavior 30 years ago before inclusion was a thing, sweetie pie. You're just a mean person. |
| What is her reasoning behind not inviting the two girls? "I don't like them" isn't an excuse when she is inviting 10 other girls. Are they brown? Is your daughter not inviting the two Spanish-speaking girls to her party? |
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So what happens at the party? The two girls likely won't have fun because they are not friends with the other girls.
They also still won't be friends after the party unless you plan on making your daughter invite them to play at recess and on the weekend. This is not about the girls who are left out or teaching your daughter anything. It's about you and your virtue signaling. |
I don’t think it’s appropriate to ask children, mostly girls to be socal workers. |
Is this really a factor with nine year olds?! |
| My DD is also turning nine. We have previously had big parties where we invite all the girls in her class plus some but this year she wants it smaller. This is consistent with what I am seeing across the board. She is inviting 12 friends total and I bet 10 will come. |
It's cruel to leave out 2 girls. Just know that all the other moms will be talking about how you and your daughter are mean girls if you do this. I would expect that your daughter will start getting left out of things as a result. We stopped inviting the mean girl and her mom to events after they did this to my daughter. |
They are friends with the other girls in the class, just not with OP's daughter. |
| OMG this is why I encourage my kids to have small parties. Avoids so much drama. 4-5 kid parties are more fun. |
| In my home, the kid makes the guest list starting at about age 7, i.e. the age when they're old enough to know and remember who their friends are. I might ask "What about so-and-so?" but if the kid says no, it's no. |