Anonymous
Post 11/23/2025 10:48     Subject: Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hello, i’ve gone through all the things you all have said to me. I’ve tried doing all of them, but things have only gotten worse. DD has tried making new friends, but her fake ones always look at her, laugh at her, and during class literally bully her, shove her out of the way, and tell her to “shut up.” Something that really breaks me is my DD has started doing self-harm (scratching herself until she bleeds) and is really stressed about her relationships along with grades as she’s been getting 60-70 on her tests recently. She has no motivation, and stays in her room all day no matter how hard we try making things fun or getting her out of her room. Is it time to email the counselor? Would that make things worse or better?


Troll.


Not a troll… just did not want to make a new post about this when the topic is already here? Im saying things have got worse and I do not know what to do.


She needs to insult them back to regain her agency, develop self-respect and change the narrative about her.
Anonymous
Post 11/22/2025 16:49     Subject: Child is severely left out

I strongly agree with the previous post--this happened to my daughter in middle school and it was HORRIFIC. The school counselor did help my daughter (the other girl refused to meet with the counselor, and the counselor said they couldn't force her). But the counselor helped my daughter by steering her to different activities--choir, a film club. We did change schools in high school and that was saved my daughter. Good luck, OP. The mean girl cruelty is real.
Anonymous
Post 11/22/2025 11:16     Subject: Child is severely left out

My daughter went through something very similar when at intersection of 6th grade to 7 th grade and shattered her self esteem. The mean girl tried to exclude another girl, my DD stood up to her and she was excluded instead. The rest would not stand up to her. So, new friend group is needed. Think about changing schools. Think about getting her into counseling to help her learn how to navigate the difficult years of middle school. My daughter took up boxing classes for awhile and think that was helpful for her self esteem and to handle the big feelings that needed an outlet. She joined a girl scout troop based at another school- which helped too. She found a good friend at a sleep away camp based on a specific interest of hers that she still has as a closest friend years and years later. It is so hard to watch as a parent, but the more she can do to get out there by finding friends either outside the school or inside if it is a large school. Strongly suggest seeing if there is a high switch that will help for 9th grade. Changing schools lets her get a fresh start.
Anonymous
Post 11/22/2025 11:00     Subject: Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Hello, i’ve gone through all the things you all have said to me. I’ve tried doing all of them, but things have only gotten worse. DD has tried making new friends, but her fake ones always look at her, laugh at her, and during class literally bully her, shove her out of the way, and tell her to “shut up.” Something that really breaks me is my DD has started doing self-harm (scratching herself until she bleeds) and is really stressed about her relationships along with grades as she’s been getting 60-70 on her tests recently. She has no motivation, and stays in her room all day no matter how hard we try making things fun or getting her out of her room. Is it time to email the counselor? Would that make things worse or better?


Troll.


Not a troll… just did not want to make a new post about this when the topic is already here? Im saying things have got worse and I do not know what to do.
Anonymous
Post 11/22/2025 10:53     Subject: Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:Hello, i’ve gone through all the things you all have said to me. I’ve tried doing all of them, but things have only gotten worse. DD has tried making new friends, but her fake ones always look at her, laugh at her, and during class literally bully her, shove her out of the way, and tell her to “shut up.” Something that really breaks me is my DD has started doing self-harm (scratching herself until she bleeds) and is really stressed about her relationships along with grades as she’s been getting 60-70 on her tests recently. She has no motivation, and stays in her room all day no matter how hard we try making things fun or getting her out of her room. Is it time to email the counselor? Would that make things worse or better?


Troll.
Anonymous
Post 11/22/2025 10:50     Subject: Child is severely left out

Hello, i’ve gone through all the things you all have said to me. I’ve tried doing all of them, but things have only gotten worse. DD has tried making new friends, but her fake ones always look at her, laugh at her, and during class literally bully her, shove her out of the way, and tell her to “shut up.” Something that really breaks me is my DD has started doing self-harm (scratching herself until she bleeds) and is really stressed about her relationships along with grades as she’s been getting 60-70 on her tests recently. She has no motivation, and stays in her room all day no matter how hard we try making things fun or getting her out of her room. Is it time to email the counselor? Would that make things worse or better?
Anonymous
Post 11/19/2025 10:19     Subject: Re:Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the others that this is classic bullying behavior. But don’t discount the schools ability to help here!

Have you tried to maybe reach out to the guidance counselor? Could you maybe ask them to arrange a restorative justice intervention here ? (I know they’re trained and equipped for this).



OP here: I was going to talk to the counselor, but DD is worried that everyone would “hate her” for telling on them, and people would spread rumors. (This happened to another girl at the school last year, DD didn’t know her, but she ended up leaving and transferring out because it got really bad after telling the counselor.)


She's probably right. Counselors aren't equipped to handle situations like this because it's too nebulous and too prone to false rumors being spread. Nobody is ever going to want to admit that they were a jerk and without a clear cut rule violation there is nothing the school can do.


Agree with this. OP, your DD is likely correct that going to the counselor will make things worse for her -- unless it's just for her to talk to the counselor and get strategies for dealing with this and the counselor doesn't say anything to these other girls. But going to a counselor is not going to get your daughter included in their activities. I would be very cautious about taking this approach.



But aren’t counselors highly trained in how to deal with bullying? Never hurts to talk with someone.


I mean, as long as she doesn't expect it to solve the issue with the other girls. Getting advice is never a bad thing. If they want to exclude her, though, they will do so and going to a counselor will just make it worse if they find out about it. These girls have already proven they are not nice and not inclusive.

If they spreading rumors and saying nasty things on social media my answer would be different - that's definitely going to the school administration and counselor. I didn't read that they are doing that, but perhaps I missed it. Exclusion is a different beast - you can't force people to include others beyond a certain age.
Anonymous
Post 11/19/2025 10:13     Subject: Re:Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the others that this is classic bullying behavior. But don’t discount the schools ability to help here!

Have you tried to maybe reach out to the guidance counselor? Could you maybe ask them to arrange a restorative justice intervention here ? (I know they’re trained and equipped for this).



OP here: I was going to talk to the counselor, but DD is worried that everyone would “hate her” for telling on them, and people would spread rumors. (This happened to another girl at the school last year, DD didn’t know her, but she ended up leaving and transferring out because it got really bad after telling the counselor.)


She's probably right. Counselors aren't equipped to handle situations like this because it's too nebulous and too prone to false rumors being spread. Nobody is ever going to want to admit that they were a jerk and without a clear cut rule violation there is nothing the school can do.


Agree with this. OP, your DD is likely correct that going to the counselor will make things worse for her -- unless it's just for her to talk to the counselor and get strategies for dealing with this and the counselor doesn't say anything to these other girls. But going to a counselor is not going to get your daughter included in their activities. I would be very cautious about taking this approach.



But aren’t counselors highly trained in how to deal with bullying? Never hurts to talk with someone.
Anonymous
Post 11/19/2025 10:09     Subject: Re:Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the others that this is classic bullying behavior. But don’t discount the schools ability to help here!

Have you tried to maybe reach out to the guidance counselor? Could you maybe ask them to arrange a restorative justice intervention here ? (I know they’re trained and equipped for this).



OP here: I was going to talk to the counselor, but DD is worried that everyone would “hate her” for telling on them, and people would spread rumors. (This happened to another girl at the school last year, DD didn’t know her, but she ended up leaving and transferring out because it got really bad after telling the counselor.)


She's probably right. Counselors aren't equipped to handle situations like this because it's too nebulous and too prone to false rumors being spread. Nobody is ever going to want to admit that they were a jerk and without a clear cut rule violation there is nothing the school can do.


Agree with this. OP, your DD is likely correct that going to the counselor will make things worse for her -- unless it's just for her to talk to the counselor and get strategies for dealing with this and the counselor doesn't say anything to these other girls. But going to a counselor is not going to get your daughter included in their activities. I would be very cautious about taking this approach.
Anonymous
Post 11/19/2025 09:56     Subject: Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:The quiet part no one says is that all the “popular” kids are first and foremost worried about themselves and maintaining their own status. They only keep “friends” that they feel in the moment can aid that status. They are not true or loyal friends because they will drop you the moment you are no longer useful, or worse, a detriment to them.


+1
Anonymous
Post 11/19/2025 09:48     Subject: Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:The quiet part no one says is that all the “popular” kids are first and foremost worried about themselves and maintaining their own status. They only keep “friends” that they feel in the moment can aid that status. They are not true or loyal friends because they will drop you the moment you are no longer useful, or worse, a detriment to them.


It isn’t that all the popular kids are worried, it is that the most popular and well like in the popular group are really confident and the outer core of popular girls are constantly worried.

OP’s daughter is on the periphery and chances are she has not been so nice to as OP calls them the “weird” kids. The way she has maintained her status is to exclude others so going to the school counselor is pointless because the counselor understands the dynamics and will say broaden your friendships.

Anonymous
Post 11/19/2025 09:11     Subject: Re:Child is severely left out

Something that helped us what recruiting a team of 20 something girls into my DD's life just about that time, an older cousin, my cool god-daughter, a former assistant coach.....it changed everything....they would go out for coffee or nails and not directly talk about it, but I would hear my DD's perspective change from these visits (which then also led to increased texts and communications)....my DD's perspective changed in that she would talk about who among her peers would "snap out of it" be their 20's and who might not.....make comments llike "hey, you sure don't want to peak in high school" and then laugh....got her thinking about and talking about the future, and it helped us survive those unbelievably mean girl moments. If I could do it again I would not have reacted so much, and I would have encouraged her to throw a punch.....yep, it had gotten to that point....hang in there.....it passes, but it is really hard....
Anonymous
Post 11/19/2025 08:30     Subject: Re:Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the others that this is classic bullying behavior. But don’t discount the schools ability to help here!

Have you tried to maybe reach out to the guidance counselor? Could you maybe ask them to arrange a restorative justice intervention here ? (I know they’re trained and equipped for this).



OP here: I was going to talk to the counselor, but DD is worried that everyone would “hate her” for telling on them, and people would spread rumors. (This happened to another girl at the school last year, DD didn’t know her, but she ended up leaving and transferring out because it got really bad after telling the counselor.)


She's probably right. Counselors aren't equipped to handle situations like this because it's too nebulous and too prone to false rumors being spread. Nobody is ever going to want to admit that they were a jerk and without a clear cut rule violation there is nothing the school can do.
Anonymous
Post 11/18/2025 17:18     Subject: Re:Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the others that this is classic bullying behavior. But don’t discount the schools ability to help here!

Have you tried to maybe reach out to the guidance counselor? Could you maybe ask them to arrange a restorative justice intervention here ? (I know they’re trained and equipped for this).



OP here: I was going to talk to the counselor, but DD is worried that everyone would “hate her” for telling on them, and people would spread rumors. (This happened to another girl at the school last year, DD didn’t know her, but she ended up leaving and transferring out because it got really bad after telling the counselor.)


That’s tough, op. Hope things get better…
Anonymous
Post 11/18/2025 17:16     Subject: Re:Child is severely left out

Anonymous wrote:Agree with the others that this is classic bullying behavior. But don’t discount the schools ability to help here!

Have you tried to maybe reach out to the guidance counselor? Could you maybe ask them to arrange a restorative justice intervention here ? (I know they’re trained and equipped for this).



OP here: I was going to talk to the counselor, but DD is worried that everyone would “hate her” for telling on them, and people would spread rumors. (This happened to another girl at the school last year, DD didn’t know her, but she ended up leaving and transferring out because it got really bad after telling the counselor.)