That's what I thought of. DS had a fear of water and didn't learn to swim until 8. He was embarrassed when he was invited to pools and couldn't go with friends. He didn't want it to be obvious he couldn't swim. That was his final motivation to learn to swim, not all of the lessons to try to learn for safety reasons. |
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Phobia or physical difficulty, decline. Something violent that the kid won't like like laser tag or dangerous like swimming when they don't know how, decline. For both of the above, explain why to the parent.
General whines about not liking Lego's or painting or whatever, suck it up and go be a good friend. |
Please don't whine to the host that a laser tag is too "violent" for your child. You can say the dark or the lights bother them. |
this |
I probably would be tactful and just say scared of laser tag, but it's the violent aspect of it that I vividly remember freaking me out myself as a child. If my parents had forced me to go to one more of those parties, it would have been tough. |
| If it's a phobia or physical activity your kid can't manage, fine to decline. If it's just not something your kid really digs, and this is a close friend, I'm with the PP who said tell your kid to go. Kids in elementary can suck it up for a couple of hours and learn to be gracious. And if your kids is one of those who goes to a party and acts bratty and miserable and unhappy, do a better job of teaching manners and empathy. These are not toddlers, and it's not all about your kid. |
| DS was invited to an ice skating party & I wish I had declined - he didn't want to try even with one of those hold on things & was upset and embarrassed... I'd say it depends on the activity... if it's something where your child is really scared or can't do/feels really incompetent for some reason - and it was a small party with just a few friends and depending on the parents of the kid, would consider calling the parents & explaining that your kid is not able to do x activity but would love to do something another time. But honestly, I'd probably punt out with a 'family commitment' conflict or something |
| We had a rock climbing party and a child came who was afraid of heights and could not participate. I felt terrible for him. He did not have a good time and was embarrassed to be hanging out not climbing. No reason to go in a case like that. |
I vote for this. |
I posted earlier about my DS with a fear of swimming. He didn't resolve his fear until 10. It was severe and very embarrassing for him. His first pool party after resolving it, they gave a swim test for the deep end. He could swim but not a full length required to pass. He sat on the edge of the pool and told everyone he didn't feel like getting in because all the action was in the deep end. He was so upset when I picked him up. As a result, he was motivated to practice last summer until he had the stamina to swim a length. I think everyone assumes most kids enjoy the pool and can swim and it's just not the case. I would never send a child to a pool party with a fear of the water or if they couldn't swim. |
Yup, this is the perfect answer. If it's something that he can handle, tell him to suck it up and have fun. If it's something he really can't handle, be honest with the mom and see if there's some way for him to particpate. |
I totally agree! It was my 8 yo and I never sent him until he was older and wanted to attend. He wanted to hang out with friends so badly but was also so afraid before he was comfortable in the water.. People underestimate and minimize fear. OP - I wish we knew the party venue instead of all of us guessing. |
Wow, terrifically bad advice |
| I can't believe this thread has gone on for as long as it has. |
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What kind of activity does a 7 year old refuse to participate in because it makes him miserable? This just sounds like a nasty mom looking for an excuse to snub someone.
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