Anonymous wrote:It sounds like its best to sever the relationship as you are extremely judgmental of them.
Anonymous wrote:When I read what you wrote, my first thought was "those parents are struggling."
To go from being laid back to fairly suddenly (even if it's over the course of a year) being this uptight about this kind of stuff to me implies that something isn't working for them. I don't mean this in a judgmental way, but a concerned way. Could be one of a million things - something totally unrelated like an aging parent and they're looking for something they can control. Could be that while they felt in their stride with parenting a baby and a toddler and a preschooler, the elementary years are stressing them out for some reason (everyone is better at parenting some ages than others IMHO). Could be that something is going on with their kid that they're trying to solve or troubleshoot like a behavior problem that they're not having a lot of luck with. Could be a tense marriage. Could be that they're dealing with secondary infertility. Could be the post pandemic world and trying to re-find their balance.
So, my approach would be to try to sit down with the parent you're closest with and say something like "how are you holding up these days? The adjustment of the kids going to elementary school feels so big" or something else true for you that hits on a potential stressor, and see what they say. See if you can draw them out. Be a good listener. Maybe they need an understanding, sympathetic ear. Or maybe they need some more concrete help - maybe you could have their kid over every Wednesday or something after school. Who knows.
Now, it's possible that while you had similar parenting philosophies when the kids were tiny, now you've just diverged. In which case, I would try and decide if you value their friendship enough to move the focus of it away from the kids, in which case, you try and get somewhat aggressive about changing the subject or finding other common ground, or you can decide that this is no longer the relationship you need or want, in which case, you can start reaching out less and less until you hit a more comfortable distance. But honestly, I think it's more likely that they are struggling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do you care how they raise their kid, and why does it stress you out? If they are telling you to do it with your kid, that's different. But who cares if they want THE BEST ART SCHOOL for fingerpainting and you dont'? So what if Larla loves arugula and your kid doesn't? That should not impact the basic tenets of friendship.
Maybe you need to let this stuff bother you less, seems to me like you're comparing too much. Don't. Let them do them, and you do you. Don't be smug in your choices and don't care about theirs.
DP, but most parents who are this intense about things like activities, food, etc., can't just live and let live. They talk incessantly about these things, compare choices, on and on, and it's tedious AF to those of us who are more laid back.
Slightly different example, but still relevant: we went on vacation last summer with three other families. We all had separate living quarters, but got together at the beach, for meals, etc. Three of us are chill, one half of the fourth couple isn't. When that translates to repeatedly yelling at all the kids for being too noisy, limiting food options because they're not healthy enough, etc., of course it impacts the rest of us. It's not fun to see an adult yelling at kids *while on vacation* FFS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are all the 15:45s one person? Talk about projection. It's not fun to hang out with tightly wound people, at least, not fun for me!
Nope - separate posters. I don’t think it is fun to hang out with judgy people.
OP? She sounds kinda judgy
Anonymous wrote:Are all the 15:45s one person? Talk about projection. It's not fun to hang out with tightly wound people, at least, not fun for me!
That said, I think it's fine and good to have friends with different approaches to things, as long as everyone can let certain things slide and be easy going about it. We are more rigid than most about foods and screen time, but don't make it a thing when we're hanging out or on vacation together. If your friend can't let it go, and can't shut up about it, then that's not a good sign. I don't know if it's possible to give your friends gentle feedback, but I would be tired of hearing about it all of the time too.Anonymous wrote:Why do you care how they raise their kid, and why does it stress you out? If they are telling you to do it with your kid, that's different. But who cares if they want THE BEST ART SCHOOL for fingerpainting and you dont'? So what if Larla loves arugula and your kid doesn't? That should not impact the basic tenets of friendship.
Maybe you need to let this stuff bother you less, seems to me like you're comparing too much. Don't. Let them do them, and you do you. Don't be smug in your choices and don't care about theirs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are all the 15:45s one person? Talk about projection. It's not fun to hang out with tightly wound people, at least, not fun for me!
Nope - separate posters. I don’t think it is fun to hang out with judgy people.
Anonymous wrote:Are all the 15:45s one person? Talk about projection. It's not fun to hang out with tightly wound people, at least, not fun for me!