Neighbor girl comes over everyday to play, every day

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for this little girl. Obviously she does not like being at home for some reason, OP.

You sound selfish. Glad you don't live near me.

Seriously? So OP has to provide childcare for this girl every single day? No. Just, no.


Agree. The parents aren’t intervening because they’re getting free child care from OP. If they’re home they’re getting “me time” on OP’s dime. It’s bullsh*t.
Anonymous
Tell her she can come over on Tuesdays and Thursdays. That’s it. If she comes over on other days call her parents. Don’t text. Call. And keep calling until they pick up.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Tell the mom to text you before the kid comes over, to find out whether it’s a good time or not. The burden of dealing with her disappointment should fall on her mom, not on you. Be more direct with the mom. You can say you’re happy to host her sometimes but not to have her show up at your door unannounced.


So now we text before playing outside? Why can’t the OP’s kids say they don’t want to play. Why aren’t the kids all handling this. Or is it just the OP with the problem?

My kids all play outside, go to friends, bike to the park, meet up with others, knock on doors, and kids knock on ours. I don’t handle any of that. This is where we are crippling our kids.


New poster. Addressing OP here, not the PP, who is wrong -- OP, it's absolutely fine to talk with the other parent (and it doesn't have to default to mom; dad is at home working so dad can deal with his DD too) and say that unannounced drop-ins don't work, and a text asking if it's a good day is fine.

The girl is six. Don't expect her and your kids to "handle this" as PP thinks is fine. The parents need to stop letting her roam over to you and assuming if she's not at their house she's at yours. It is not "crippling our kids" to act like a parent who realizes other parents and families have other things to do than accommodate your roaming child whenever. And the earlier PP is right that the girl's parents, not you, need to be the ones disappointing her!

OP, there's a bigger picture here too. Your older DD is nine. That gives a natural break point for these drop-in visits because -- nine will quickly become a world apart from the six-year-olds, especially as the school year progresses.

1) She's at an age where she is soon going to be bored with playing with six-year-olds. Both your DDs seem to compete to play with neighbor girl now but six and nine are very different ages and older DD should soon be doing her own thing with peers more. Is she getting play dates some weekdays with friends her own age?

2) Doesn't older DD have any after-school activities yet? If not -- she surely will very soon, and that puts an end to letting the neighbor girl just drop by. "We now have soccer/dance/afterschool science club/Girl Scouts some days after school, so we can't do unscheduled drop-ins any more. Text me if your DD wants to come over and I'll let you know." Or you text the parent if your girls haven't seen the neighbor in a while and want to play.

3) And what about homework? If younger DD doesn't have much or any, older DD surely does by now. Say to the parents, "This year older DD is in (third grade? whatever) and the homework is now more important so we have a new routine for school days. Fridays we're likelier to be free after school, so if you want to shoot me a text on Friday mornings to see if that's a good day, please do, but other weekdays are for homework and activities. Thanks."

I'm not saying to ice out the neighbor girl, but as others have noted, every day is too much and her parents seem unaware that your family might want family time. Do not be afraid of the girl's tears. I think if a child seemed truly to be neglected or stressed, yes, you could be a respite for her, but the case you describe does not sound that way. She sounds lonely and bored with parents who are into the "let kids be kids and go find neighbors" thing, but you are not required to embrace that, especially at the expense of your kids and you having time together.

I would NOT set specific days of the week she can come over, as some suggested above. If you do that, you create an expectation that your family is always available those days -- what if one of your DDs needs to go somewhere after school one of those weekdays, or you just are tired and not up for having a third child around? There will be tears.

OP, you are not a bad person or mean neighbor or an enemy to the "village" if you curb this. Have her over only on your terms. Tell the parents in advance, rather than have her go home wailing that you're so mean. Use the "new school year, new routines for us" explanation and use it starting now.
Anonymous
Report to CPS. That's not normal behavior.
Anonymous
^^I suppose you are right, but my heart breaks for the girl.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:^^I suppose you are right, but my heart breaks for the girl.


^All the more resin to report, no?

This time the girl stumbled upon a nice family that simply doesn’t have the bandwidth to take care of another child daily. What if the next family she comes upon isn’t so nice?
Anonymous
I don't understand the posters who are feeling sorry for this girl. This is exactly what we did as kids. We went outside and then went to see if the neighbors could play. It wasn't parents sending us over it was just us looking for playmates. OP, you should be more clear. If you say it's snacktime, then of course she will wait until after snacktime. Tell her "not today, but you can come back on thursday." If she cries, call her parents.
Anonymous
I would set a schedule and be direct with her. Kids that age don't get hints so you need to tell her the rules, which include "if I tell you that you can't come over, you need to go home." I would also tell her parents the rules, and definitely tell them if she is hanging out on the porch crying after you ask her to go home.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the posters who are feeling sorry for this girl. This is exactly what we did as kids. We went outside and then went to see if the neighbors could play. It wasn't parents sending us over it was just us looking for playmates. OP, you should be more clear. If you say it's snacktime, then of course she will wait until after snacktime. Tell her "not today, but you can come back on thursday." If she cries, call her parents.


I have a kid who would absolutely do this. She's not unhappy, she's just very extroverted.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Report to CPS. That's not normal behavior.

I hope you are kidding. There is no sign of anything wrong except the girl likes playing at OP's house. It's people like you who clutter up CPS with nonsense so there are fewer resources to deal with actual abuse and neglect.
Anonymous

I would address the crying with her parents.

This is not normal.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Report to CPS. That's not normal behavior.


+1.

Talk to the parents one last time.

If behavior continues, report it. Something is wrong in that family. Save the girl.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Tell the mom to text you before the kid comes over, to find out whether it’s a good time or not. The burden of dealing with her disappointment should fall on her mom, not on you. Be more direct with the mom. You can say you’re happy to host her sometimes but not to have her show up at your door unannounced.


This. Tell her that the drop-ins aren't working well with your after school schedule.
Anonymous
If she starts crying, you need to walk her home and tell the adult there "I'm so sorry, Larla and Jane need some down time today, and we're busy tomorrow but would be happy to have Carrie over to play on Wednesday."
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