Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised that in eight pages of posts, no one has commented how weird it was that the girls ganged up on OP's daughter in her own home. I was both the victim and perpetrator of pranks in middle school, but you never targeted the kid who was having the party--because back then, everyone was a little afraid of other peoples' parents.
I won't speak to my opinion OP's response. But if a girl did this to my child in my home, that's a huge sign of disrespect not just to my DD but to me.
To save my DD, I might have handled it more calmly, but those girls would not have been invited back. Ever.
Anonymous wrote:OP the PP's that are saying you overreacted are the same PP's who probably think it is okay if DD has friends whose parents smoke weed. I think you handled it well. The reason OP was so upset was because her daughter's two best friends ganged up on her at a sleep over.
+1Anonymous wrote:OP, thanks for the update. I think you handled it well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think posters here have little ability to empathize with a 6th grade girl.
According to OP, the sleepover girls took gloppy sparkle makeup and plopped it randomly all over her daughter's face. OP said it was in splotches -- on her forehead, her cheeks, her EYES?? her chin, her hair.
They totally smeared this girl. Putting stuff on her eyes?
Imagine for a moment someone doing this to your daughter, or to you, while you slept.
I think this is a very mean act. I do NOT think it is the same kind of "prank" as putting someone's hand in warm water while they sleep. Or even as putting lipstick on a boy, or writing something on someone's forehead.
When you deface someone's face like that, I think it is an act of aggression. "I hate her and I'm going to mark up her face" is what it feels like to me.
I am guessing that the chest pains OP felt were not directly a result of seeing her daughter's face all messed up, but were the anxiety she felt from feeling like her daughter was symbolically attacked.
I'm one who commented on mom's reaction. My DS has been bullied and harassed to the point of being suicidal. He's been attacked at school and his life threatened. Parents do their kids no good when they don't stay calm. Help her wash the gunk of, and get her back to sleep. Deal with it calmly in the AM. Even the speech to the girls went overboard IMO. Is it bullying? I guess that depends on the intent. Were they trying to pull a prank and blew it? Maybe. Were they trying to inflict harm in the form of a major upset? Perhaps. And THAT would equal bullying.
When parents can't deal with it, they aren't a help to their kids.
It actually still wouldn't. Bullying is "the repeated and habitual use of force, threat, or coercion to abuse, intimidate, or aggressively impose domination over others." Bullying is a pattern of behavior, not one action. Not all acts that are mean or aggressive are bullying.
I highly doubt this was bullying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For God's sake it was a joke! They didn't put hot grease or acid on her face. Kids play jokes on each other. They don't make the best decisions but neither did you when you were that age.
I get a kick out of the whining mom's who want to contact the school. The school? What the hell are they going to do?
Amazing what wimps we are raising.
For God's sake it's easier to say it's a joke than to actually deal with middle school girls and their parents in a direct, reasonable manner.
PP, you are the wimp.
Anonymous wrote:For God's sake it was a joke! They didn't put hot grease or acid on her face. Kids play jokes on each other. They don't make the best decisions but neither did you when you were that age.
I get a kick out of the whining mom's who want to contact the school. The school? What the hell are they going to do?
Amazing what wimps we are raising.
Anonymous wrote:It was only make up. If it had been marker then I would be upset to the point of sending out a 3am email. Your daughter didn't talk a lot bc she was embarrassed. She is going to be teased at school.
Anonymous wrote:OP I know you are hurting, but you went a bit overboard. Next time something like this happens, take a few hours before you react.
Emailing the parents at 3:30? Telling them at drop off that this is an opportunity to teach our girls better behavior? Of course after you called them, they understood that.
I think you would have been better served to talk with your daughter the next day about coping strategies. You could have still discussed with the girls and parents the next day at drop off.