Anonymous wrote:Someone did this to my kid. The mom asked for the playdate and set it up. My (6 year old) child was very excited. An hour before we were supposed to meet, the mom texts me to cancel because her kid didn’t do xyz and his consequence was forfeiting the playdate. My child was so sad, and honestly I didn’t even know what to say. I didn’t want to say their friend was “punished“ for being naughty, but I didn’t know how to explain it had nothing to do with my kid, either. So I just made up an excuse about how something came up but their friend was so bummed to miss the playdate! Honestly it made me never want to hang out again.
Anonymous wrote:How in the world does this punish the other child? What a weird take on it. Sounds like you just don't want to deal with teaching your kid consequences.
Anonymous wrote:I don't usually because I think it's unfair to the other child, and will make the other family less inclined to make plans with me. But if my child was behaving so badly that I thought the playdate would be unpleasant for everyone, then there's little point in going forward with it.
For example I did pull the plug on a couple the first month of kindergarten. My kid was so exhausted from the school week that she was melting down on weekends too. She wasn't emotionally equipped to play with another kid at that time.Anonymous wrote:Only if I think my kid is so out of sorts that the playdate won't go well. I don't want to set her up to fail socially.