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Reply to "DD’s friend suspended for drugs; Disinvite?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I agree that the girl will need some non-drugging friends. We’re hoping for clues from her parents about what steps they will take to get her on a better path. Right now, they are focused on the suspension. That isn’t inspiring confidence that they take it seriously. Even if our thinking was “It’s just a little weed.”, there are other parents in the friend group who told their teens to drop the girl. Partly because the girl’s parents appear to want to fight the suspension although there’s no doubt she possessed on school grounds. If she comes to DD’s party, at least 4 other girls might not. I’m worried this will label us soft on drugs. Maybe splinter DD off into a peer group of weed smokers. [/quote] Please don't listen to the other posters, do not invite this girl. You want your kid to end up with the non-drug group when this group breaks up into two. You don't want to have to worry that this girl is bringing weed to the party. If it were my kid getting caught with weed at school and potentially selling, my kid wouldn't be attending any party in the summer. [/quote] +1. Lots of "just a little weed" no-big-deal posters on DCUM and more will be back here. But OP, your perception that this could end up fracturing the friend group is right. As the PP here notes, y[b]ou don't want your DD on the wrong side[/b] (and yeah, it IS wrong) of that fracture. And[b] teachers at school will know who is and who isn't in the friend groups [/b]and believe me, It is truly sad that the girl's family may have more money than sense. It's sad especially if she is otherwise an OK kid. Please listen to and watch out for your DD; teen girls often want to help and save friends who are in trouble--many teen girls feel they need to stand by the troubled friend, won't abandon her etc. That is compassionate and kind and laudable yet can end up in a very bad place for the kind and caring kid. I've seen it happen, OP. Teen girls trying to be the supportive friend who end up sucked into drama that drags them down. Rather than flat-out ordering your DD to disinvite, ta[b]lk to DD about the party and point out that the girl isn't a close friend. Talk to DD about how peer group counts more and more through high school[/b] and how the girl will get help from those qualified to help. And in the end [b]ensure the girl doesn't come[/b]. I sound uncaring, I'm sure, but I'm not. The kid does need help. But other teens aren't responsible for that. Unless this is a year-round school-- Fortunately summer is very close so the daily school routine stops. If DD wouldn't have seen much or anything of this girl over the summer, good. It created a natural break in how much the other kids will see and think of her. I hope DD has a full, busy summer planned. [/quote] These are the important parts of the message that you want to pass along. You really need to emphasize that social exclusion is desirable for groups and that every teen should think first about what their friends will think. Teenagers just don't put enough importance on their peer groups without parents telling them how important it is to run with the right crowd. You really want to emphasize that other people's perception of you is the key. So many teens fail to evaluate things in terms of what other people are going to think. A few are even so messed up that they try to think about how their actions affect others. Nobody has ever gone wrong following the herd. As long as your behavior is tolerated in the group, then you are good. Really hammer that home. And if your teen should try to stick with this friend, make sure that you intervene, preferably through some duplicitous means to split your DD from this friend. After all, how will your DD make the right friends and keep them if you don't engineer and control her relationships?[/quote] At first I was getting furious reading this response, then slowly it dawned on me... Good work, PP![/quote]
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