Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First off, you are taking the word of a tween, who live to exaggerate, to ban a friendship based on hearsay seems crazy. Next time, show up late to “bring Larla her allergy meds or forgotten toothbrush” and see for yourself. Maybe the “high schooler” already graduated and is 18, in which case both of those things might not be that serious if true.
Secondly, if these parents ARE permissive like that, they aren’t going to give 2 rips if you always host. If it comes up, you can just say your dd struggles to sleep outside her bed so you prefer to have them at your house. No sense making drama telling the truth.
Thirdly, even if banning friendships worked, these girls are 11, you have a few years and friendship circles change. When and if kids start to seek out teen party experiences they usually ditch their old friends and find new friends with the same interests. Your daughter come 8th grade will either decide to do that herself and attract those friends, or they will reject her if she’s not interested. That you think you can control that by controlling her friendships is silly.
Your ending just sort of fizzled away.
Anonymous wrote:First off, you are taking the word of a tween, who live to exaggerate, to ban a friendship based on hearsay seems crazy. Next time, show up late to “bring Larla her allergy meds or forgotten toothbrush” and see for yourself. Maybe the “high schooler” already graduated and is 18, in which case both of those things might not be that serious if true.
Secondly, if these parents ARE permissive like that, they aren’t going to give 2 rips if you always host. If it comes up, you can just say your dd struggles to sleep outside her bed so you prefer to have them at your house. No sense making drama telling the truth.
Thirdly, even if banning friendships worked, these girls are 11, you have a few years and friendship circles change. When and if kids start to seek out teen party experiences they usually ditch their old friends and find new friends with the same interests. Your daughter come 8th grade will either decide to do that herself and attract those friends, or they will reject her if she’s not interested. That you think you can control that by controlling her friendships is silly.
Anonymous wrote:Normally I would say don’t intervene but you run the risk of this becoming a sustained friendship and the friend WILL behave the same way as the siblings.
Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help her make new friends- encourage joining things, facilitate hanging out with other friends. Talk with her about why what happened at her sleepover is worrisome, ask if she can think of a way to maintain the friendship without sleeping there. She should be e able to come up with staying friends but only having the girl over to your house.
This is what I considered, but I’m not sure how to facilitate that with the mom? How does one turn down every single invite? Doesn’t it get obvious to the parents after a while?
Anonymous wrote:Normally I would say don’t intervene but you run the risk of this becoming a sustained friendship and the friend WILL behave the same way as the siblings.
Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Help her make new friends- encourage joining things, facilitate hanging out with other friends. Talk with her about why what happened at her sleepover is worrisome, ask if she can think of a way to maintain the friendship without sleeping there. She should be e able to come up with staying friends but only having the girl over to your house.