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Tweens and Teens
Reply to "Halloween dis-invitation"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote]There’s a lot of noise in this thread, but the bottom line is, try not to raise kids who would uninvite someone at the last minute and then go trick-or-treating at that kid’s house. Just try not to raise little a**holes. +1 [/quote] Absolutely, but I think OP's question is what she and her son can do in light of the fact that this happened. I don't have any great advice, it is a difficult situation, and I think move on and try to focus on other friends is the best answer.[/quote] +1 I think also validating (calmly, not making it worse) that this is rude behavior. Comments on this thread are weird. It’s not social engineering to ask your kids what their plans are and remind them that it is rude to cancel because you get a better offer - either include everyone or stick to the original plan. You should know what your middle schooler is up to. However, it also is true that in our school (Arlington) I have seen that parents are lonely so basically create their social life around kids (travel team, sports teams, etc) and there is a lot of value placed on “block parties” etc that have a specific guest list rather than just distributing fliers to the entire neighborhood. It’s all very cliquey and although I’m hoping it fades (my ildest is MS), I’m not sure it will. A lot of kids don’t have great manners (I have a boy and a lot of his class are little sh*ts) and [b]I think because the families engineer socially, they don’t gain the same social skills we did as kids because the natural consequence of being left out for bad behavior is avoided when mom is planning a block party.[/b] We are trying to teach our kids that people show you who they are and to consider whether they are true friends or not. It is hard, and especially the last few years of elementary up to middle have been hard, but I’m hoping they find their way as they head to high school. [/quote] Yes, this is so spot on.[/quote]
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