Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP depending on type and stage of cancer and the treatment that got her into remission, your child’s bestie’s mom might never regain her precancer health and energy levels, she remains immune compromised within a few years of having cancer and treatment and she is absolutely right to limit the kid traffic in her home because kids of all ages are Petri dishes of communicable disease.
And yes, if she has diminished energy and needs to manage her stress, she should be focusing her all on her own family and not on hosting playdates.
And her daughter should not be blamed nor should you be judging her mother or making snark comments to your kid.
Be grateful you’ve not had cancer thus far in your life. Show some grace.
+1
I'm in year 2 after successful cancer treatment, in remission, and I am not back to anything close to my precancer health and energy levels. I have some likely permanent side effects from the treatment that have created other health problems and invisible disability that are a chore to deal with. To most people I look fine, but I'm not. It's been enormously frustrating and discouraging, and like OP's friend I've realized I need to prioritize myself/my family and keep stress at bay. I don't host anything. I'm fortunate that my kid is slightly older and more capable of arranging things for themselves; at most I may have to drive them somewhere.
OP - Decide how much you want and are able to do to help your kid maintain the friendship. That's where your focus needs to be.
Okay but these girls are. tweens, not toddlers who need their asses wiped. Tweens can go off and play for a couple of hours while you lie on the couch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP depending on type and stage of cancer and the treatment that got her into remission, your child’s bestie’s mom might never regain her precancer health and energy levels, she remains immune compromised within a few years of having cancer and treatment and she is absolutely right to limit the kid traffic in her home because kids of all ages are Petri dishes of communicable disease.
And yes, if she has diminished energy and needs to manage her stress, she should be focusing her all on her own family and not on hosting playdates.
And her daughter should not be blamed nor should you be judging her mother or making snark comments to your kid.
Be grateful you’ve not had cancer thus far in your life. Show some grace.
+1
I'm in year 2 after successful cancer treatment, in remission, and I am not back to anything close to my precancer health and energy levels. I have some likely permanent side effects from the treatment that have created other health problems and invisible disability that are a chore to deal with. To most people I look fine, but I'm not. It's been enormously frustrating and discouraging, and like OP's friend I've realized I need to prioritize myself/my family and keep stress at bay. I don't host anything. I'm fortunate that my kid is slightly older and more capable of arranging things for themselves; at most I may have to drive them somewhere.
OP - Decide how much you want and are able to do to help your kid maintain the friendship. That's where your focus needs to be.
Anonymous wrote:OP depending on type and stage of cancer and the treatment that got her into remission, your child’s bestie’s mom might never regain her precancer health and energy levels, she remains immune compromised within a few years of having cancer and treatment and she is absolutely right to limit the kid traffic in her home because kids of all ages are Petri dishes of communicable disease.
And yes, if she has diminished energy and needs to manage her stress, she should be focusing her all on her own family and not on hosting playdates.
And her daughter should not be blamed nor should you be judging her mother or making snark comments to your kid.
Be grateful you’ve not had cancer thus far in your life. Show some grace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do not get the need for reciprocation. It’s about the kids and the kids can’t decide that their parents should host. If you can’t afford it, do home movie nights with pancakes for dinner and popcorn for snacks. That’s like $1 a person. It’s really not hard to add extra kids to your household for a few hours. Honestly many parents dream of being the hangout house so they can be part of their kids’ lives and have control over their activities.
It’s nice to have a mental health break once in a while too. The other parents gets a break when OP takes their kid. Other parents shoujd reciprocate. ( not OP)
Anonymous wrote:I do not get the need for reciprocation. It’s about the kids and the kids can’t decide that their parents should host. If you can’t afford it, do home movie nights with pancakes for dinner and popcorn for snacks. That’s like $1 a person. It’s really not hard to add extra kids to your household for a few hours. Honestly many parents dream of being the hangout house so they can be part of their kids’ lives and have control over their activities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You decide how much you are willing to host. You do that. You tell your daughter that not everyone is the same and some families just do not have the energy to host.
How is that fair? Hosting can be as simple as picking up my child and having her Accompany them to Chick-fil-A dinner one night. Or drop them off at a movie and then pick them up and bring my child home. That is not exerting energy “hosting” - that’s just being polite to reciprocate.
-OP