Anonymous wrote:Who cares? I bring a book, plop down to read, and only stop reading if someone comes to talk with me or the thing is over.
The more you want to be noticed by them, the more they'll exclude you. If you don't care, they'll be intrigued.
Anonymous wrote:I"m going to sympathize with you OP.
I agree with the others that this is an opportunity for downtime, not to take it personally etc.
But my DS was on a new baseball team for one season and man, those moms were so clique-ish and snotty. There was one small bleacher for all the parents and they would surround me and ignore me -- it was awful. I tried to chat in a friendly way ... nothing. They actually brought enticing snacks (like warm, delicious smelling homemade cinnamon bread) and passed them around to all the siblings -- including passing them OVER my DD without offering any to her. They were really horrible.
Needless to say … all Chevy Chase moms.
Anonymous wrote:DD is in soccer- she is in the 2nd grade and has been on the same soccer team since late K. The moms who are team moms and coach moms all physically move themselves away from the rest of the team parents and talk *every practice and game*.. I don't think it's about me/my child- but the anti-social component is rather extreme. I know one of the moms who's DD has been in DD's class since K so it's 3 years going - the girls get along great- I can chat relatively freely with this mom too. But when it comes to soccer- she is maybe two seconds nice then zooms off to her clique comprised of moms with no kids in our school. I am all for friendships outside of an ES and have those- but it's just so abrupt and blatantly rude. For those who have BDDT, please advise. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:I am so happy to sit there by myself for an hour at soccer practice and just veg, play on my phone, read a book or watch my kid play.
I am not there for myself; I am there because my kid wants to do this activity.
Just look at soccer as bonus "me" time and don't worry about it being "group" time for you.
Anonymous wrote:Who cares? I bring a book, plop down to read, and only stop reading if someone comes to talk with me or the thing is over.
The more you want to be noticed by them, the more they'll exclude you. If you don't care, they'll be intrigued.