| 20:44, they were inviting him in person to be mean knowing he wasn't really invited? ouch. That is harsh for first graders. |
Yes. It was a game to them. |
Jesus Murphy that is indeed terrible. |
Did the teacher do anything? that sucks. |
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I am realizing that some people are just horrible. I would never exclude any child. And if the child was SN, I would invite the parents too, just in case the child got overwhelmed.
OP, make alternate plans...tell your son that you have already booked seats for xyz...and you will have to check if the tickets can get cancelled, else you will have to miss Larla's birthday. I will do as another person suggested, call the mom and let her know that Larla invited your son and could she send you the details. If she does not want you there - fine. You tried and now you know that Larla's mom is not a good human being. So, there are only positives. |
Brutal.
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| OP, please update us and let us know how it goes! We're rooting for your son. |
| It might help to keep some perspective on this... Kids in first grade will barely remember this in a few years let alone a few months.... Unless the parents make a big deal about it! Just tell the kid you forgot and made plans to do blah, blah, blah and you can't make it to the party... but plan to make his friend a nice card to help her celebrate. this won't be a big deal unless you make it one....I think we tend to take these things too personally/seriously but these are just little kids and most will be on to something else in a blink. |
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I would never deliberately exclude a child from a party when the rest of the class, gender, etc is invited.
If a child has disruptive behavioral issues, I would talk privately with the parents and ask that one of them stay for the duration of the party. I understand small parties but I don't understand adults excluding a young child- there's just no excuse. The aunt with the party/American Girl experience-- be assured that those parents were raised by wolves. Awful. OP- I'm in the camp that suggests planning something fun- even if it's a movie at home with a gentle explanation. |
That would be true if it were a one off, however, with children who have an SN that includes social issue it isn't. It is years of not being invited or included. It does leave a scar for many of them if intervention is not done. |
The problem is not all special needs parents, just like other parents are not attentive. If the parents are, you can make it work. I was friends with a mom when our kids were is preschool and they regularly came over for a while and her kid would be very destructive and break my kids toys. She would not supervise him and just said to glue or I can replace it, no big deal. I got tired of stuff being broken. |
Mom of two non-SN kids, and if she did invite everyone except your DS? I do blame that mother. Very much. That would be an outrageously cruel thing to do. |
+1. I'm sorry, OP. I hope it works out. |
Sometimes that's not enough. The parent may come but may be so relieved to finally think their kid is part of the group they don't intervene. Or they're so used to their kid's awful behavior that they let things go that are unacceptable. We tried to include a horridly behaved boy once, because my DD has a sweet heart and said nobody had ever invited him to a party and she wanted to. He threw temper tantrums, he punched his fist through the cake, he screamed through the Happy Birthday song, he opened two presents before DH started taking them all away, and his mother did NOTHING. "He's just excited." No, he was making my daughter regret being kind and ruining her party. Oh, and then he also refused to leave our house. And his mom just kept drinking her coffee and not getting up - they were the last to leave. We never invited him again and I don't regret that decision. |
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I don't have a SN child but I do have an odd/different perspective on this. Over 40 years ago, when I was new to a school, I was invited to a 'popular girl's' birthday party: I had invited her to mine. She told me on the playground, in front of many other children, "I only invited you because my mom made me do it." We were in second grade.
I was hurt and embarrassed and while I don't remember a thing about that party, I do remember the little girl's face and tone as she told me. Children can be terribly cruel. Moms can be, too, or sometimes simply forgetful (although if she's invited almost everyone in the class and not your DC, well, that's tough). In this case, it sounds as though you're doing the best you can, OP. Good luck. |