Anonymous wrote:My 13 year old DS has always been a really nice kid, a bit quirky, but had friends. This year, although he has friends at school, he has not had a single friend over to the house. Has done a couple things outside of school with them but had no interest in having anyone over. Has this happened to anyone, any advice on how to encourage seeing friends or is this a normal part of this age for some kids? He is busy with activities and also sees other friends there. He was just so enthusiastic when younger and always wanted to have a friend over when given the chance? When I ask him he just says he is tired after school/ activities and wants the downtime to himself. I think this is reasonable but at the same time I worry a bit that something is going on that I am missing. Any thoughts or BTDT?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not unusual. If he is eating lunch with friends, he is good. As a mom five years ahead of you with a kid like this, here is what I know.
I think the big schools these kids attend are just too noisy for some kids, so the introverted are truly done by the end of the day, especially if there is a club or two.
Kids do need to do less face-to-face socializing because of technology. Not all good or all bad.
Kids don't have the freedom to roam like we did, so plans have to be made further in advance. Not a tween strength.
Definitely pay attention and make sure you make it easy for him to engage outside of school. Drive when asked, have him invite a kid along, make your house comfortable for hanging out....
Don't over-restrict screen time. Of course, limits are important and maintaining good grades is also important, but a lot of quality social interaction occurs on line now, and youwant your kid to have access and learn good habits.
(Before you flip out, my kid uses software to code cooperatively with his buds for a joint project. He games on-line with a regular group of nice people from around the world. They don't curse or talk about anything but the game. He also wastes time texting, but that is no different from me sitting in the front hall closet on the phone back in the day)
I agree with this completely. Great advice.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I could have written your post about my 13-year-old DS. Same exact scenario. I’m keeping my eye on him, but so far, he seems content to socialize only at school and during activities. For the most part, he’s not interested in hanging out and never makes plans unless someone else initiates. He’s also not interested in social media which I’m more than ok with, but my sense is that is how a lot of kids are communicating these days so that may be part of it. I have no idea if this is “normal” for this age, but he seems happy so I’m going with that for now.
Anonymous wrote:My 13 year old DS has always been a really nice kid, a bit quirky, but had friends. This year, although he has friends at school, he has not had a single friend over to the house. Has done a couple things outside of school with them but had no interest in having anyone over. Has this happened to anyone, any advice on how to encourage seeing friends or is this a normal part of this age for some kids? He is busy with activities and also sees other friends there. He was just so enthusiastic when younger and always wanted to have a friend over when given the chance? When I ask him he just says he is tired after school/ activities and wants the downtime to himself. I think this is reasonable but at the same time I worry a bit that something is going on that I am missing. Any thoughts or BTDT?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not unusual. If he is eating lunch with friends, he is good. As a mom five years ahead of you with a kid like this, here is what I know.
I think the big schools these kids attend are just too noisy for some kids, so the introverted are truly done by the end of the day, especially if there is a club or two.
Kids do need to do less face-to-face socializing because of technology. Not all good or all bad.
Kids don't have the freedom to roam like we did, so plans have to be made further in advance. Not a tween strength.
Definitely pay attention and make sure you make it easy for him to engage outside of school. Drive when asked, have him invite a kid along, make your house comfortable for hanging out....
Don't over-restrict screen time. Of course, limits are important and maintaining good grades is also important, but a lot of quality social interaction occurs on line now, and youwant your kid to have access and learn good habits.
(Before you flip out, my kid uses software to code cooperatively with his buds for a joint project. He games on-line with a regular group of nice people from around the world. They don't curse or talk about anything but the game. He also wastes time texting, but that is no different from me sitting in the front hall closet on the phone back in the day)
I agree with this completely. Great advice.
I agree except for restricting screen time. You need to restrict screen time so that your kid (especially the introverts) don't replace seeing friends in person with seeing friends online/texting
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not unusual. If he is eating lunch with friends, he is good. As a mom five years ahead of you with a kid like this, here is what I know.
I think the big schools these kids attend are just too noisy for some kids, so the introverted are truly done by the end of the day, especially if there is a club or two.
Kids do need to do less face-to-face socializing because of technology. Not all good or all bad.
Kids don't have the freedom to roam like we did, so plans have to be made further in advance. Not a tween strength.
Definitely pay attention and make sure you make it easy for him to engage outside of school. Drive when asked, have him invite a kid along, make your house comfortable for hanging out....
Don't over-restrict screen time. Of course, limits are important and maintaining good grades is also important, but a lot of quality social interaction occurs on line now, and youwant your kid to have access and learn good habits.
(Before you flip out, my kid uses software to code cooperatively with his buds for a joint project. He games on-line with a regular group of nice people from around the world. They don't curse or talk about anything but the game. He also wastes time texting, but that is no different from me sitting in the front hall closet on the phone back in the day)
I agree with this completely. Great advice.
Anonymous wrote:Not unusual. If he is eating lunch with friends, he is good. As a mom five years ahead of you with a kid like this, here is what I know.
I think the big schools these kids attend are just too noisy for some kids, so the introverted are truly done by the end of the day, especially if there is a club or two.
Kids do need to do less face-to-face socializing because of technology. Not all good or all bad.
Kids don't have the freedom to roam like we did, so plans have to be made further in advance. Not a tween strength.
Definitely pay attention and make sure you make it easy for him to engage outside of school. Drive when asked, have him invite a kid along, make your house comfortable for hanging out....
Don't over-restrict screen time. Of course, limits are important and maintaining good grades is also important, but a lot of quality social interaction occurs on line now, and youwant your kid to have access and learn good habits.
(Before you flip out, my kid uses software to code cooperatively with his buds for a joint project. He games on-line with a regular group of nice people from around the world. They don't curse or talk about anything but the game. He also wastes time texting, but that is no different from me sitting in the front hall closet on the phone back in the day)