The only thing, weird OP, is your reaction to all of this! Seriously please evaluate why you’re making such a big deal out of this. |
| Swim Team Moms are the worst. They’re usually extremely fat, bossy cows living vicariously through their kids while refusing to exercise at all themselves. My swimmer attends practices, goes to some meets and then we stay the hell out of anything that isn’t mandatory. I pay extra fees not to volunteer, but it’s worth it. In general, dads are so much better about organizing sports’ activities. This stupid note nonsense is just another example of that. |
You’re really selling yourself. |
| Is this real? I cannot believe how op has made this so a huge deal. |
Are you slow? The buddy changes weekly! |
| You are over-reacting. I understand why a child feels disappointed, but then again, she chose to put in all the time and effort with gel pens, etc.—because it’s a GIFT, right? And gifts are given with no expectation of reciprocity. Either she makes an effort because she wants to and doesn’t expect anything in return, or she dials it back because she gets not everyone has the gusto. |
| OP, I am a teacher of fourth graders. You will be amazed that children have all different reading and writing levels. I have some students that are on a kindergarten and first grade level when it comes to writing. Its not unheard of. Maybe the chid did not want to feel left out and wanted to participate but knew her writing would not be good so mom helped out. I am not saying its the case but giving you a perspective that would hopefully make you look at things a little less negative. |
| Most tedious thread ever. Congrats OP |
Because her DD busted out the gel pens! Sorry, that’s gonna be a top 10 read-it-on-DCUM phrase for me now. |
Thanks! Trying to provide you with the full swim team experience. A meet’s nothing if not tedious! |
| I have a child that has fine motor delays so could not have written a note really at third grade. I still remember a mom teasing him on a hike because his shoes weren’t tied. He honestly could not tie his shoes so I tied them for him but it was embarrassing to have his mom do it in front of all the other boys. He is academically advanced and very athletic but could not do things like that (puzzles and legos were also a challenge). Anyway you don’t really know. It’s a good opportunity to remind your daughter everyone is dealing with different stuff. So long as the note wasn’t mean, I’d use it as a teaching oportunjy. The same way she’d want teammates to have some empathy for her not having a great week at a meet, she can have some empathy for a teammate that is not a great writer or maybe had a bad week in some other unknwn way. And maybe appreciate the mom who stepped up and tried to fill in the gap. |
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This woman did all the work of setting up and running this program, and you're shitting on her for making sure your daughter got a note?
OP and your daughter have sensitivity/anxiety issues. That's OK. We all do. But you need to work on that, and not rage out on everyone around you for their completely normal, civil, *caring*, behavior, or else you'll isolate yourselves even further. |
| OP owes that lady a heartfelt apology, and daughter owes her a gel-pen thank you note for promoting team morale. |
So between posting this a little after midnight and this post before 9 AM, you already texted the mother to ask her what happened? |
Not Op, but come on. What work did she do? Telling a few kids to write a few notes and messing it up so that OP’s kid didn’t have a match? No, this lady came up with a stupid idea and then half-assed it. Maybe she should focus on doing one thing right at a time instead of having her hands in a lot of different pots and doing everything badly? |