Anonymous wrote:Some of you are missing OPs point, it’s not that the parent reached out, it’s that the parent reached out after Op already said no. This is what she finds off-putting. If my child told me her friend couldn’t go, I would never reach out to the parent looking for a yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kid is telling her friends you won't allow her due to covid concerns. It doesn't matter what you tell other parents. The ability to frame the story is now gone when you have teens and social media and more.
There's no need for pushy notes, for sure. I think since most people in this area are vaccinated at that age, people are resuming most social activities, indoor and out. So perhaps you are more cautious than most of your kid's friend set. And that's why a parent (who I assume you know) is reaching out. I would have phrased it about what you'd like to see to make you more comfortable with allowing your daughter to go.
The kids are having a lot of social skill issues right now. They've missed a year of socializing in appropriate ways. Personally, I would balance the value of allowing your child to socialize with the risk of COVID.
OP here, I acknowledge that and I’ve tried to balance safety concerns (I have 2 unvaxxed kids at home including a kid with immune issues and a 2 month old) with giving my DD room to do things with her friends. I’ve tried to indulge as much as possible but sometimes “no” is the only option. It’s hard enough dealing with pressure to do this for DD and DD pleading to do things - last thing I need is another parent on my case. It’s just a vent.
Well this is just the beginning! Your daughter is entering her teen years where kids spend lots of time together. I do think it’s unfair to keep her home to protect younger kids?
NP. Well that’s YOUR call. If you want your unvaxxed kids to get covid because you think your teen jut HAS to socialize indoors or doing whatever they want rather than keeping things outside, that’s your call. But maybe op wants to be more cautious. It is fine for her to prioritize her younger kids health.
Anonymous wrote:Some of you are missing OPs point, it’s not that the parent reached out, it’s that the parent reached out after Op already said no.[b] This is what she finds off-putting. If my child told me her friend couldn’t go, I would never reach out to the parent looking for a yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know why you see this as pressure. It’s not out of the ordinary for parents to reach out to other parents.
At 13??? Not in my social group! Kids make plans on their own. If there is an extraordinary event like an out of town vacation a parent might call for extra details but that's it.
Please understand that various parents do things differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know why you see this as pressure. It’s not out of the ordinary for parents to reach out to other parents.
At 13??? Not in my social group! Kids make plans on their own. If there is an extraordinary event like an out of town vacation a parent might call for extra details but that's it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know why you see this as pressure. It’s not out of the ordinary for parents to reach out to other parents.
At 13??? Not in my social group! Kids make plans on their own. If there is an extraordinary event like an out of town vacation a parent might call for extra details but that's it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know why you see this as pressure. It’s not out of the ordinary for parents to reach out to other parents.
At 13??? Not in my social group! Kids make plans on their own. If there is an extraordinary event like an out of town vacation a parent might call for extra details but that's it.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know why you see this as pressure. It’s not out of the ordinary for parents to reach out to other parents.
Anonymous wrote:Yes op I’ve had this happen and it was the same parent. After awhile I realized it was my DC and their friend working together so I addressed it with DC. I realized there are parents who can’t tell their children no,I’m not one of them.
Anonymous wrote:I got one text that was something like "Would Larla like to hang out with Suzy on Saturday at our home? Covid numbers are down for the area, I know you all are vaccinated and so are we and.....yada yada." I felt like saying "Yes, Karen, we read the news. I will not be sharing our family health issues with you, but no our kids are not socializing inside." Luckily our kids have people to spend time with outside where I don't need a bunch of texts back and forth because we are on the same page and just want our kids hanging out outside. Honestly, unless someone is beating her kids it is not the place of another parent to do this. You do you and I'll parent my kid.