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OP, can you tell us more about the religious bullying? That's not acceptable at all. What religion are you? What religion is the other kid?
I think it's great that you have your son's back. |
+1 But OP I think you are doing the right thing in changing who you invite. |
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Okay, yes, you may be hurting the bully's feelings by not inviting him and possibly inviting everyone else. But, think about it, how badly is the bully hurting your child's feelings? Doesn't sound like the bully/bully's parents care that much. The bully, though he/she may be young, has brought this upon him/herself.
It doesn't seem fair that your child is the one who always gets the bad consequences because of the bully's bad choices...it's your child that gets bullied in school and it's your child that doesn't get the party he/she wants, and your child whose friendship opportunities that suffer because he/she has to trim down the invite list to ensure the bully's feelings don't get hurt. And it's your child that finds out he/she can't be inclusive to all the kids who do treat him/her nicely because it might hurt the bully's feelings. Really, we have always invited everyone in the grade and now every boy in the grade to our parties, but after reading this, I don't think I would feel bad inviting everyone but the bully who torments my kid every day. My kids have never been bullied but it makes me mad to think about what your child has to deal with at school. He/she should be enjoying school, learning new things, exploring, making new friends. First grade should be a fun, exciting time and it is awful that this bully is making him afraid every day. If the bully's parents aren't actively trying to help the situation, I wouldn't care one whit about their feelings either. |
| Don't invite the bully or your son won't be able to relax. |
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There are many times former foes have become great friends at that age. Don't know how the school got involved, don't know current status.
Have a parent/ other adult prepped to monitor the bully, but don't cut him out. He's already insecure, if he knows about the party things won't get better. Don't let him ruin it, if he can't hold it together, and font make your son have to manage him. Have another adult ready to intervene. It might work and it might not, but you avoid making things worse for your son by exclusion. |
| People, it is only going to make the bullying situation worse if they have a party and invite the entire class except this one kid. Just invite a smaller group. That is what will make your kid's life easiest. |
My thoughts exactly. Why are you assuming the bully will have his feelings crushed by not being at his victim's party? On the other hand you and your child are having a whole lot of heartache over this already, when you should be happy and looking forward to celebrate YOUR CHILD's birthday. |
People keep suggesting this...are you even reading the posts?? OP has explained quite clearly why this is not an option. |
You're making this harder than it needs to be. OP, ask your kid which kids in his class he likes most so far and is interested in getting to know. Then invite those kids. It is a first grade birthday party, not a wedding. If the smaller guest list doesn't wind up being your kid's friends for life, it is ok. |
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Have a neighborhood friends party instead of a school friends party. |
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Or delay the party and do a half year party---by then you will know who your child's friends are. |
| Like I said up thread, don't invite the bully kid. No one will question/care/or even notice. And the bully kid's parents aren't going to call you up and ask about it. And if anyone does ask, tell the truth, the kid bullied your child so you didn't invite him. |
Yes another suggestion punishing the bday kid. Have the party. He invites who he wants, even if this means his bully isn't invited. |
I'd include the kid, but request that his parents stay. Or, you could just enlist some extra adults to help supervise--it sounds like the kid doesn't pick on your kid when other adults are nearby. |
| How about inviting 3 or 4 friends he's really close to, say from pre-K up to now. What's the point of having 15 kids at a party? Sounds like a recipe for disaster. Why do birthday parties need to be huge productions? |