Anonymous wrote:Or you could give people the benefit of the doubt. Show some grace. Be the bigger person. When they go low, you go high
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s looking for babysitting.
+1 she’s using you. That’s why it makes you feel the way it does.
Anonymous wrote:She’s looking for babysitting.
Anonymous wrote:Or you could give people the benefit of the doubt. Show some grace. Be the bigger person. When they go low, you go high
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is rude, but is it possible that she has actual reasons for not wanting to host other than being “a taker”? Maybe her home is small and she’s embarrassed or something.
In this case, I’d suggest a play date at my house when I was prepared to have one and would assume that she means them to happen at my house every time. If I don’t want to do that, maybe I’d suggest another location (e.g., meet at the Zoo or playground or breakfast or whatever) and if she suggests my house, tell her the house isn’t company-ready and leave it at that.
This. It is rude, but it’s really not worth your time to figure out why she’s rude or get upset about it. I’d just focus on the important part: does your daughter want a play date with this friend? If yes, invite. If no, don’t invite.
Exactly.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe she's embarrassed by her home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is rude, but is it possible that she has actual reasons for not wanting to host other than being “a taker”? Maybe her home is small and she’s embarrassed or something.
In this case, I’d suggest a play date at my house when I was prepared to have one and would assume that she means them to happen at my house every time. If I don’t want to do that, maybe I’d suggest another location (e.g., meet at the Zoo or playground or breakfast or whatever) and if she suggests my house, tell her the house isn’t company-ready and leave it at that.
This. It is rude, but it’s really not worth your time to figure out why she’s rude or get upset about it. I’d just focus on the important part: does your daughter want a play date with this friend? If yes, invite. If no, don’t invite.