Anonymous wrote:Why don’t you nurture the friendships that he currently has? For example, suggest having a few kids over on a Friday night and pickup the pizza tab or offer to drive to a school sporting event. Basically, put a few ideas in his head.
he refuses
Anonymous wrote:I hear you. IME friendships among boys are more transient/casual (nowhere near as “deep” or as big of an issue if that makes sense?) than for girls at this age. Pretty normal. He’ll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I hear you. IME friendships among boys are more transient/casual (nowhere near as “deep” or as big of an issue if that makes sense?) than for girls at this age. Pretty normal. He’ll be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I get it, OP. You’re worried about his friend situation, and you feel like a little nudge here or there could make a big difference. I have a kid like this, and I remind myself that his situation is up to him at this point. They’re teenagers and we can’t keep trying to curate their lives. Your son will make new friends at his new school. Or he won’t. Either way it’s out of your hands!
Anonymous wrote:I can't even figure out what this is about. There are literally no problems. He asked you to do something too late to do it, you told him that, he said no sweat.
Despite you being happy he didn't ask you to appeal or whatever, you extrapolated that somehow whatever this is makes you a bad mother? Are you ... on medicine?