Anonymous wrote:I facilitated my DD having multiple friend-groups so if she had a bomb in one friend group, she wasn't left friendless. Also, I encouraged her to befriend the kind kids, and to be low drama. I talked about my own friendships (both the ones I had at her age, and my current ones) and explained my logic in approaching situations. She saw me assume the best many times, like "I miss Grace, I haven't heard from her in two months. It's really stressful moving to a new state by yourself while working full time and then immediately breaking your leg. I can't be angry at her for not reaching out to me - the last thing she needs is another difficultly to deal with!" Or "Bianca left without saying goodbye or thank you, after I put in so much work on this party. I know she was really stressed about getting home safely so had to jump on that offer Keri and Joel made to drive her home." So while maybe she couldn't relate to the exact issues I'd have, she'd see me extending grace, and hear my friends extended grace to me (like when I forgot a friend's birthday when my grandmother died and we had to put our dog to sleep in the same weekend).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lots of friendship changes in 6th grade! That was normal for both of my daughters. And I will also confirm that a lot of kids are just plain MEAN.
Their parents aren’t so great, either
Anonymous wrote:I facilitated my DD having multiple friend-groups so if she had a bomb in one friend group, she wasn't left friendless. Also, I encouraged her to befriend the kind kids, and to be low drama. I talked about my own friendships (both the ones I had at her age, and my current ones) and explained my logic in approaching situations. She saw me assume the best many times, like "I miss Grace, I haven't heard from her in two months. It's really stressful moving to a new state by yourself while working full time and then immediately breaking your leg. I can't be angry at her for not reaching out to me - the last thing she needs is another difficultly to deal with!" Or "Bianca left without saying goodbye or thank you, after I put in so much work on this party. I know she was really stressed about getting home safely so had to jump on that offer Keri and Joel made to drive her home." So while maybe she couldn't relate to the exact issues I'd have, she'd see me extending grace, and hear my friends extended grace to me (like when I forgot a friend's birthday when my grandmother died and we had to put our dog to sleep in the same weekend).
Anonymous wrote:Lots of friendship changes in 6th grade! That was normal for both of my daughters. And I will also confirm that a lot of kids are just plain MEAN.
Anonymous wrote:My DD is finishing 6th grade and it has been a roller coaster of a year with friendships changing. She started the year with a solid group of friends from elementary, and I would say that pretty much none of them are still friends.
It feels like every month there was drama with someone being mean and causing a rift among some of the others. Tons of people being excluded at different times, people turning on one another, someone deciding they have nothing in common anymore with someone else and no longer want to be friends.
My DD was crying tonight that she feels like she has no friends anymore and everyone is just so mean all the time.
I am really curious what the next two years will hold so wondering if I should expect at least 2 more years of this and when the dust will settle.
What has others’ experience been?