Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another question from OP- obviously, my oldest kid is 11. I don’t know any 15 year olds well at all (no close friends with kids that age). Why would I be expected to know their developmental level and what’s appropriate/typical behavior? That’s literally what I’m here asking about but people are criticizing me for…not knowing what I don’t know? What I came here to ask? Too funny
Bet you have an immature 11 year old boy you don’t enjoy. My teen girls are lovely.
I’m sure they are, but they are not who I look forward to talking to on a Friday night over a glass of wine.
I'm sure they aren't looking forward to talking to you either, but they are doing the best once they are stuck with your unpleasant family.
Thinking that 15 year old wants to hang out with "kiddos" maybe be part of your problem". 15 year olds are becoming young adults.
Young adults who can stay home. Or go out with friends. Or stay in their room and text with their friends. Why was the 15 yr old even there after dinner?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another question from OP- obviously, my oldest kid is 11. I don’t know any 15 year olds well at all (no close friends with kids that age). Why would I be expected to know their developmental level and what’s appropriate/typical behavior? That’s literally what I’m here asking about but people are criticizing me for…not knowing what I don’t know? What I came here to ask? Too funny
Bet you have an immature 11 year old boy you don’t enjoy. My teen girls are lovely.
I’m sure they are, but they are not who I look forward to talking to on a Friday night over a glass of wine.
I'm sure they aren't looking forward to talking to you either, but they are doing the best once they are stuck with your unpleasant family.
Thinking that 15 year old wants to hang out with "kiddos" maybe be part of your problem". 15 year olds are becoming young adults.
Anonymous wrote:Love how this thread turned into everyone bragging about their ability to socialize with children on a Saturday night and how much they love it …. Post it again in a month OP and say you love hanging out with your friends teens and the same people will come ridicule you for being weird. It’s just about being critical. Next thread
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- Okay. So if this is normal, I just need to prepare to socialize with my friends and a 15 year old everytime we host them?
Im aware this sounds stupid, but do you all just sort of accept that you have to chat with boring and pedantic teens now (this one was a vegan and told us all about it) when you are trying to socialize with other adults?
You sound horrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you ATA here.
You're immature and selfish.
This man is being a great dad to his daughter, if you are really their friends you would welcome their teen to your table-- the more the merrier.
The fact that you tried to fob her off onto screens (movie and vied games) and she preferred to be with actual humans having areal conversations speaks volumes about both of your values and character.
Won't be surprised when this attitude bites you in the arse when your own kids become teens.
You’re ridiculous. This isn’t going to “bite OP in the arse” (stop with the affectation — you’re not British, and don’t lie and say you are), because she will establish appropriation boundaries with her teenagers so they don’t hang around and interrupt adults trying to have a conversation all night.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- Okay. So if this is normal, I just need to prepare to socialize with my friends and a 15 year old everytime we host them?
Im aware this sounds stupid, but do you all just sort of accept that you have to chat with boring and pedantic teens now (this one was a vegan and told us all about it) when you are trying to socialize with other adults?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another question from OP- obviously, my oldest kid is 11. I don’t know any 15 year olds well at all (no close friends with kids that age). Why would I be expected to know their developmental level and what’s appropriate/typical behavior? That’s literally what I’m here asking about but people are criticizing me for…not knowing what I don’t know? What I came here to ask? Too funny
Bet you have an immature 11 year old boy you don’t enjoy. My teen girls are lovely.
I’m sure they are, but they are not who I look forward to talking to on a Friday night over a glass of wine.
I'm sure they aren't looking forward to talking to you either, but they are doing the best once they are stuck with your unpleasant family.
Thinking that 15 year old wants to hang out with "kiddos" maybe be part of your problem". 15 year olds are becoming young adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another question from OP- obviously, my oldest kid is 11. I don’t know any 15 year olds well at all (no close friends with kids that age). Why would I be expected to know their developmental level and what’s appropriate/typical behavior? That’s literally what I’m here asking about but people are criticizing me for…not knowing what I don’t know? What I came here to ask? Too funny
Bet you have an immature 11 year old boy you don’t enjoy. My teen girls are lovely.
I’m sure they are, but they are not who I look forward to talking to on a Friday night over a glass of wine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
What on earth did you expect to talk about that you couldn't broach in front of a 15 year old? Your swinging proposition? Your binges? Your new sex tape?
Teens are developmentally ready to talk with adults. I have an 18 year old in college and a 13 year old - they can talk and opine about current events, and they're mature enough to hear about personal struggles (sanitized for the 13 year old). When he was 15, my son would often hang out with the adults, because we have a social circle where he has always been the oldest. So unless his friends were there, he would gravitate towards us, listen nonchalantly and interject perfectly appropriate comments or questions.
I know you think your teens are fascinating, but adults don’t want to spend all evening talking to them. Sorry.
No, she shouldn’t have been a babysitter, but she should have stayed home alone and if there’s a valid reason that isn’t feasible, go into another room with her phone.
you know you can change the subject right?
Are you the OP now just posting in third person because this lack of empathy reeks of OP. This 15yo is in a split custody situation. Of course she is going to want to spend time with her dad just as he wants to spend time with her. All these updates with mixed signals, oh she was boring, pedantic and discussed in depth being a vegan but also she was just lovely...sounds like a troll.
Haha I’m the OP. Not a troll I don’t have time for that. We didn’t know the dad had a shared custody situation or another kid until the day of. Of course I wouldn’t desire the kid to be left home alone if she wants to come, I’m not monster.
Y’all are punking me, right? You really want to chat over wine with a 15 year old about all their extracurriculars and ap scores for 4 hours on a Saturday night? Cmon now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bonus to the 15 year old talking with adults, you are getting a sneak peak into teen life- very useful!
Nobody wants this. Sorry. Your kid isn’t the gift to the world you think they are.
Anonymous wrote:I hate when we hang out with families like this. I do not want to spend my Saturday night having to be polite to the stupid stuff your 15 year old says. I want adult time. Tell your teen to find something to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another question from OP- obviously, my oldest kid is 11. I don’t know any 15 year olds well at all (no close friends with kids that age). Why would I be expected to know their developmental level and what’s appropriate/typical behavior? That’s literally what I’m here asking about but people are criticizing me for…not knowing what I don’t know? What I came here to ask? Too funny
Bet you have an immature 11 year old boy you don’t enjoy. My teen girls are lovely.