Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You are WAY overthinking this whole scenario.
This. Stop calling your kid a dork. Get him better clothing and teach him to ride his bike.
Some kids are just mean.
This.
People will be mean in every stage of his life.
It happens to everyone. Teach him some self-confidence, quit using the excuse that he's small. Quit calling him a dork and then being mad because other kids treat him like one! Quit encouraging him to go crawling back to people who treat him like shit. Get him in some other activities so he came make other friends.
The kids on your street aren't his friends. Quit trying to make them be. Your son is annoying them and they aren't going to change his mind.
Ok, ok, aggressive people are out in full force! I will take the pieces of your advice that might be helpful, but you've made horrible assumptions.
I did it affectionately, and only here, not to him of course! I only said it to explain in one word that he's different from these kids. That's fine. I understand his interests are different than most kids, and it's ok for people to not be friends when they have nothing in common or are different ages. I don't hold it against any of the children that they don't want to play with my son - I only hold the grudge for the mean comments. He dresses fine and obviously we're working on the bike situation. He's less mature, having just turned 6 last week and a K, while the others are 2nd-6th grades (with the exception of a 3 year old sibling). If he was athletic, they'd accept him, but he's still in to super heroes and can't throw a football and has no interest in chasing down flags. He's in scouts and gymnastics and soccer/t-ball, depending on season, and our family is very active with our community. He's got several friends at school that share his interests and we trade play dates with them. But, at 6, we can't constantly have his friends over and if he hears kids, he wants to play outside or ride down the street. Surely you don't suggest I keep him locked inside on a beautiful day because of a mean girl? I think teaching him to run and hide is the opposite of teach self-confidence, but maybe I'm missing something. But, again, thank all for the attempts to be helpful and I hope to pick some helpful tips up!