Anonymous wrote:You should say "maybe".
Because guess what maybe they will be friends again, maybe they will mature and change and grow, maybe they will apologize at some point or be better friends. They are all kids. It doesn't excuse bad behavior but I 100 percent guarantee your DD has not been a nice girl every minute of her life so far and you'd want other people to give her room to grow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a division of the cooler prettier girls during the teen years.
I remember going to middle school and I had a good friend drop me for the cool popular crowd. I made new friends who were equally pretty and nice but we didn’t hang out with boys. The friend who acted like she no longer knew me was basically recruited by the cool boys. I never thought of my friend as mean.
Parents who present the kids who go off with popular friends or find a new group as "mean" are genuinely missing an opportunity. Friendships shift. People grow apart. Sometimes we might like it and sometimes we might not. It's part of life. Do teen girls always handle it the best way they could? Nope. So talk about that. But really it is normal for friendships to change so teach your kids to be resilient and move on with as much grace as possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a division of the cooler prettier girls during the teen years.
I remember going to middle school and I had a good friend drop me for the cool popular crowd. I made new friends who were equally pretty and nice but we didn’t hang out with boys. The friend who acted like she no longer knew me was basically recruited by the cool boys. I never thought of my friend as mean.
This is true but in IME the cooler, prettier girls have endless drama and don’t do well in school because they are focused on the social scene and not studies.
Anonymous wrote:There is a division of the cooler prettier girls during the teen years.
I remember going to middle school and I had a good friend drop me for the cool popular crowd. I made new friends who were equally pretty and nice but we didn’t hang out with boys. The friend who acted like she no longer knew me was basically recruited by the cool boys. I never thought of my friend as mean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should say "maybe".
Because guess what maybe they will be friends again, maybe they will mature and change and grow, maybe they will apologize at some point or be better friends. They are all kids. It doesn't excuse bad behavior but I 100 percent guarantee your DD has not been a nice girl every minute of her life so far and you'd want other people to give her room to grow.
It absolutely sounds like you are trivializing bullying by making everyone who is not "a nice girl every single minute of their lives" the same.
They are not the same. And lot of mean girls continue to be mean adults. They don't miraculously grow up and mature at some later point - this is their growing and up maturing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should say "maybe".
Because guess what maybe they will be friends again, maybe they will mature and change and grow, maybe they will apologize at some point or be better friends. They are all kids. It doesn't excuse bad behavior but I 100 percent guarantee your DD has not been a nice girl every minute of her life so far and you'd want other people to give her room to grow.
It absolutely sounds like you are trivializing bullying by making everyone who is not "a nice girl every single minute of their lives" the same.
They are not the same. And lot of mean girls continue to be mean adults. They don't miraculously grow up and mature at some later point - this is their growing and up maturing.
Anonymous wrote:There is a division of the cooler prettier girls during the teen years.
I remember going to middle school and I had a good friend drop me for the cool popular crowd. I made new friends who were equally pretty and nice but we didn’t hang out with boys. The friend who acted like she no longer knew me was basically recruited by the cool boys. I never thought of my friend as mean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should say "maybe".
Because guess what maybe they will be friends again, maybe they will mature and change and grow, maybe they will apologize at some point or be better friends. They are all kids. It doesn't excuse bad behavior but I 100 percent guarantee your DD has not been a nice girl every minute of her life so far and you'd want other people to give her room to grow.
It absolutely sounds like you are trivializing bullying by making everyone who is not "a nice girl every single minute of their lives" the same.
They are not the same. And lot of mean girls continue to be mean adults. They don't miraculously grow up and mature at some later point - this is their growing and up maturing.
Anonymous wrote:You should say "maybe".
Because guess what maybe they will be friends again, maybe they will mature and change and grow, maybe they will apologize at some point or be better friends. They are all kids. It doesn't excuse bad behavior but I 100 percent guarantee your DD has not been a nice girl every minute of her life so far and you'd want other people to give her room to grow.