Anonymous wrote:I'd hold off on playdates with the kid. Threatening to end the friendship if you don't do as asked is manipulative. I realize it's a little kid, but the message you should send to your daughter is that it's okay to walk away from that kind of behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our DD is 3.5 and has started hearing this recently. We talk about how it hurts, but how it might not be how they "really" feel (sometimes we say things when we're sad or mad). This worked because DD has also started saying "I don't love you" when she's mad. She's getting better at not taking it to heart, but she's a sensitive kid in general.
We're hearing this, too; same age. I've figured out that "I don't want to be your friend" really means "I don't want to play with you right now." So we talk about how sometimes we don't want to play the same thing as a friend, and that's okay. We can still be friends and play together later.

Anonymous wrote:Our DD is 3.5 and has started hearing this recently. We talk about how it hurts, but how it might not be how they "really" feel (sometimes we say things when we're sad or mad). This worked because DD has also started saying "I don't love you" when she's mad. She's getting better at not taking it to heart, but she's a sensitive kid in general.
Anonymous wrote:One of my daughter's friends keep saying this whenever my daughter doesn't want to play what he wants to play right then. I know it used to hurt her a lot when she was younger, and at that time, we would take a break and the boy's parent would talk to him and eventually he would apologize. Now she is six, she doesn't cry about it, so I'm not sure if she's just hiding the hurt or she has learned to brush it off. But since she doesn't appear visibly upset, we have just been ignoring it. This makes him get more riled up and keep saying it over and over. It doesn't feel right. Any suggestions? When they do both want to play the same thing, they play well together and she does want to keep doing play dates with him.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Unfortunately, ignoring him doesn't make him stop. He gets more and more frustrated and angry. And then of course the less my daughter wants to play with him right then. Playing with someone else often isn't an option, during arranged play dates when there is no one else around.
To those of you advocating just letting them work it out themselves, at what point do you intervene when there is mean behavior? Doesn't just standing by send the message that it's OK ?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Unfortunately, ignoring him doesn't make him stop. He gets more and more frustrated and angry. And then of course the less my daughter wants to play with him right then. Playing with someone else often isn't an option, during arranged play dates when there is no one else around.
To those of you advocating just letting them work it out themselves, at what point do you intervene when there is mean behavior? Doesn't just standing by send the message that it's OK ?