Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds normal to me. After she asked once I would have put the gift away. Kids might be uncomfortable with new foods.
I am getting so tired of the responses justifying all children’s bad behavior. So they ate four snacks but “might be uncomfortable with new foods”? Uh, ok.
God forbid you ever meet an autistic child. Your head would probably explode.
If the kid's autism prevents them from following normal social cues during a playdate perhaps they aren't ready for playdates.
But in all likelihood, this kid is not autistic and you all just want to continue to make excuses for bad behavior. OP made ONE post on a parenting forum. You act like she called the kid the r-word and beat her with a stick every time she asked for the toy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP said in first post that their kid had not gotten around to opening the controversial gift. So it's kid's gift and their choice. Maybe they were saving it for later.
Agree that putting it out of sight would have been a way to hopefully reinforce that it isn't going to be played with.
All the chastisements about visitor wanted to play are just bs.
Team Op.
It’s ok to say no, but why the drama?
Anonymous wrote:OP said in first post that their kid had not gotten around to opening the controversial gift. So it's kid's gift and their choice. Maybe they were saving it for later.
Agree that putting it out of sight would have been a way to hopefully reinforce that it isn't going to be played with.
All the chastisements about visitor wanted to play are just bs.
Team Op.
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the PPs. Plenty of people open a new toy like a game or craft at a playdate, because it's nice to explore it with a friend. So the visiting kid may not have initially known it being being "saved." Anyway they kept asking, it's not like they tore it open and broke it. Next time put the toy away (or at least after the first time a kid asks).
I always offer food/snacks but am not a short order cook. "This is what I have" / "this is what we can have right now" is what I say to repeated snack requests
I dont get how OP is so.worked up she's posting here and writing these crazy.emotional replies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds normal to me. After she asked once I would have put the gift away. Kids might be uncomfortable with new foods.
I am getting so tired of the responses justifying all children’s bad behavior. So they ate four snacks but “might be uncomfortable with new foods”? Uh, ok.
God forbid you ever meet an autistic child. Your head would probably explode.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds normal to me. After she asked once I would have put the gift away. Kids might be uncomfortable with new foods.
I am getting so tired of the responses justifying all children’s bad behavior. So they ate four snacks but “might be uncomfortable with new foods”? Uh, ok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seems normal. You, on the other hand, don't know how to manage children.
+1
+2
DCUM, I invited a kid over for a playdate with my child and he repeatedly tried to play with my child. How angry should I be??