| I'm a single mom and I would do the same thing as you OP. |
+1. Of course OP's daughter wants to be part of what the older girls are doing. It's incredibly rude of OP's friend not to set some rules on how her daughters behave when they have guests. Not to mention how rude it was of her to invite other kids but not OP's. OP, regardless of how you handle this situation, I would pull back from her and try to have a work only relationship. |
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OP, it sounds like this friend feels close enough with you to be straightforward and honest. Do her the same courtesy but I wouldn't go on and on about your "single mom" status - I would simply tell her that while it was your idea, you had (1) envisioned that all the kids would be included and you can't attend without bringing your kids or (2) envisioned this would be an "adults only" girls night and don't want to attend with all the moms bringing their children while yours are at home without you.
Pick either 1 or 2 - whichever is the truth. |
+1000000000000000 WHAT THE F***??? My kid has other kids she may not get along with that well, but in a situation like this, I would tell her to suck it up and be nice, unless there was bullying, of course. |
Seriously, this person is NOT your friend. |
Amen. My dd has 2 close friends who do not get along. My kid wanted to invite both girls to an outing. Guess what, I let her. And the other girls' mom said yes, all the moms agreeing that the girls would have to learn how to get along for the sake of the b'day girl. Guess what, all 3 had a great time and did not bug the snot out of one another. As adults, we set the tone and expectations. What a jerk. |
OP, You have done what many fail to do, garner a DCUM concensus. This lady is a jerk. Be professional, but avoid, avoid, avoid. |