Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I understand that the lady was crazy.
However, if it was me, I would have made sure that she gets it somehow. Even if I had to send my neighbor on Uber to drop it at her house or something. Mainly because it was my DS's fault. After that I would have never had any communication with that person because best to leave toxic people out of your life. This would be called taking the high road.
Agreed. Her unreasonable request should not outweigh taking responsibility for an unfortunate mistake.
You teach your kids to take responsibility for someone else's mistake?
javascript:emoticon(''); The kid took the swimsuit. He needs to fix this mistake. Since he is a kid, his parents need to fix the kid's mistake. You are teaching the kid to take responsibility for his own mistake. The other lady did not commit a mistake. She also offered alternatives to the OP, that the OP refused.
OP is entitled. She will raise entitled brats.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you screwed up when you offered to drive to return the suit. You bargained that she'd decline your offer but she didn't. That's on you. If you had left that from the conversation and just offered reimbursement, that would have probably been that. You offered to drive it, then backed off.
BTW, agreeing to meet you halfway was a good compromise, IMO. Driving 30 minutes is not an unreasonable request.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I understand that the lady was crazy.
However, if it was me, I would have made sure that she gets it somehow. Even if I had to send my neighbor on Uber to drop it at her house or something. Mainly because it was my DS's fault. After that I would have never had any communication with that person because best to leave toxic people out of your life. This would be called taking the high road.
Agreed. Her unreasonable request should not outweigh taking responsibility for an unfortunate mistake.
You teach your kids to take responsibility for someone else's mistake?
'); The kid took the swimsuit. He needs to fix this mistake. Since he is a kid, his parents need to fix the kid's mistake. You are teaching the kid to take responsibility for his own mistake. The other lady did not commit a mistake. She also offered alternatives to the OP, that the OP refused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a kids bathing suit.. Yeah she can pick another one up at target on the way to the beach. If it was an adult bathing suit I would be more understanding. I'm a heavier woman and I have exactly 3 bathing suits that don't draw attention to my ass and hips, so yeah I would be pissed if you "stole" one. But a kid... Don't sweat it.
I do think people are tearing into you because of your excuses. Honestly you didn't owe her an excuse. You could have just said no.
Ugh, what a selfish person. I hope someone else is in charge of teaching your children morals.
Morals? We aren't discussing abortion or the death penalty. This was an honest mistake.
And you are to CORRECT your mistakes. It's not just the big problems we should have a moral code about, you know. Or maybe you don't know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a kids bathing suit.. Yeah she can pick another one up at target on the way to the beach. If it was an adult bathing suit I would be more understanding. I'm a heavier woman and I have exactly 3 bathing suits that don't draw attention to my ass and hips, so yeah I would be pissed if you "stole" one. But a kid... Don't sweat it.
I do think people are tearing into you because of your excuses. Honestly you didn't owe her an excuse. You could have just said no.
Ugh, what a selfish person. I hope someone else is in charge of teaching your children morals.
Morals? We aren't discussing abortion or the death penalty. This was an honest mistake.
And you are to CORRECT your mistakes. It's not just the big problems we should have a moral code about, you know. Or maybe you don't know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you are being ridiculous. Your kid screwed up, and you should have made it right. Your entire message screams "me! Me! Me!" I don't want to drive 50 minutes. I don't want to wake the baby.
Agreed. I don't want to... MY baby....
Guess what- NO ONE CARES what you want to do, or if you have to wake your baby, or how far you have to drive, or where your husband is (big deal- his choice). You need to make it right- YOU are the parent of this child who stole/ removed a bathing suit, intentionally or not. If you refuse, you deserve the repercussions (no more invites, bill for new bathing suit, badmouthing, whatever else).
OK where did stealing come into it ...weirdo! No you do not drive almost 2 hours roundtrip. She can buy another suit, you can send her $15 if she goes bonkers about it. Loon!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a kids bathing suit.. Yeah she can pick another one up at target on the way to the beach. If it was an adult bathing suit I would be more understanding. I'm a heavier woman and I have exactly 3 bathing suits that don't draw attention to my ass and hips, so yeah I would be pissed if you "stole" one. But a kid... Don't sweat it.
I do think people are tearing into you because of your excuses. Honestly you didn't owe her an excuse. You could have just said no.
Ugh, what a selfish person. I hope someone else is in charge of teaching your children morals.
Morals? We aren't discussing abortion or the death penalty. This was an honest mistake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many of you guys are missing the a big point. NO ONE IS THE WRONGED PARTY!! A kid accidentally took another kids swim suit. A Target suit swim suit!
I'm sure the OP wishes now that she had just offered to pay for a new one and then replace the old one latter.
I disagree. The Mom is inconvenienced. And she's certainly wronged now that she's out the swimsuit that OP offered to drive to her.
The offer to paypal or venmo the money is brilliant, for emergency Jersey Shore bathing suit mixups like these.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a kids bathing suit.. Yeah she can pick another one up at target on the way to the beach. If it was an adult bathing suit I would be more understanding. I'm a heavier woman and I have exactly 3 bathing suits that don't draw attention to my ass and hips, so yeah I would be pissed if you "stole" one. But a kid... Don't sweat it.
I do think people are tearing into you because of your excuses. Honestly you didn't owe her an excuse. You could have just said no.
Ugh, what a selfish person. I hope someone else is in charge of teaching your children morals.
Anonymous wrote:For a kids bathing suit.. Yeah she can pick another one up at target on the way to the beach. If it was an adult bathing suit I would be more understanding. I'm a heavier woman and I have exactly 3 bathing suits that don't draw attention to my ass and hips, so yeah I would be pissed if you "stole" one. But a kid... Don't sweat it.
I do think people are tearing into you because of your excuses. Honestly you didn't owe her an excuse. You could have just said no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think many of you guys are missing the a big point. NO ONE IS THE WRONGED PARTY!! A kid accidentally took another kids swim suit. A Target suit swim suit!
I'm sure the OP wishes now that she had just offered to pay for a new one and then replace the old one latter.
This shouting prompts me to ask WHO ONLY HAS ONE BATHING SUIT FOR THEIR KID?!!