Anonymous wrote:Let it be. Very normal at this age. But she should realize that if she decides that the cool girls aren’t as cool as she thought, or they drop her, she may not be able to easily go back to her old friends. I am seeing this play out now with DC (who was one of the ones left behind and the group has moved on).
Anonymous wrote:This has been discussed a lot. The popular group is not the one you want for your child. We live in a liberal wealthy town. My oldest was always with the same friends, the popular fast group. Some had serious activities outside of school like my daughter. Some played sports, some did nothing but there wasn’t any one thing they all had in common other than they were considered popular. Drugs, alcohol, sex all earlier than the other kids.
My youngest has a nice group of friends. I’m so happy she’s not in that type of group. I don’t see her changing.
I’d recommend keeping her as busy as possible .
Anonymous wrote:I think it's somewhat normal to outgrow your friends sometimes. As long as she is not exhibiting mean girl behavior, leave it alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t interfere unless she’s actively picking on other kids. It’s normal for kids to drift apart from old friends and form new bonds at this age.
My daughter is in seventh and has spent a good chunk of the last few months in the "left behind" group. Even from that vantage point, I agree with this. But I would also say that no one does this gracefully - your daughter and these friends have probably taken some kind of nuclear option where they either openly make fun of the old friends or totally ignore them to make the point they are cooler now - and they are smart enough to do it in a way that you won't see. Like if you asked a teacher, not sure she would say what your kid is saying about lunch. And for the former friends, even if they don't show it, it stings. So if the new group doesn't pan out, it's not on them to pick up where she left off.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t interfere unless she’s actively picking on other kids. It’s normal for kids to drift apart from old friends and form new bonds at this age.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t interfere unless she’s actively picking on other kids. It’s normal for kids to drift apart from old friends and form new bonds at this age.