Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd need more info on the commitment. If it involves letting down other people who are not involved in the drama, I'd have her keep the commitment.
If it's come help me move my couch (I know dumb example they are kids but whatever their equivalent would be), then hell no.
I don’t want to give away too much, but my DD is proficient in something that this girl is doing for the first time, and my DD was going in support.
As in, your DD was going to watch the other girl do something? If that’s the case, then I’d be fine with my DD skipping the event given the circumstances. There is no way I personally would go to support a “friend” who treated me badly, and I wouldn’t expect my DD to either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd need more info on the commitment. If it involves letting down other people who are not involved in the drama, I'd have her keep the commitment.
If it's come help me move my couch (I know dumb example they are kids but whatever their equivalent would be), then hell no.
I don’t want to give away too much, but my DD is proficient in something that this girl is doing for the first time, and my DD was going in support.
Anonymous wrote:What’s the lesson here?
People F you over, but nice girls act like doormats and get used?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd need more info on the commitment. If it involves letting down other people who are not involved in the drama, I'd have her keep the commitment.
If it's come help me move my couch (I know dumb example they are kids but whatever their equivalent would be), then hell no.
I don’t want to give away too much, but my DD is proficient in something that this girl is doing for the first time, and my DD was going in support.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it is tonight, I think your daughter has to be the bigger person and make good on the commitment.
It sounds like there was time (weeks? days?) that both the commitment and betrayal were known about. If your daughter was going to back out, it would have been understandable if she had communicated her decision when there was time for the formal friend to find a replacement or reschedule.
I had actually completely forgotten about it until the mother texted me to remind me!
Anonymous wrote:I'd need more info on the commitment. If it involves letting down other people who are not involved in the drama, I'd have her keep the commitment.
If it's come help me move my couch (I know dumb example they are kids but whatever their equivalent would be), then hell no.
Anonymous wrote:I’m all for honoring your commitments, but even I as an adult would not help out someone who has treated me poorly. I would let her bail. It seems that they are no longer friends so maybe the “friend” isn’t expecting her to help anymore?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m all for honoring your commitments, but even I as an adult would not help out someone who has treated me poorly. I would let her bail. It seems that they are no longer friends so maybe the “friend” isn’t expecting her to help anymore?
The mother, who may or may not know about the drama, texted to confirm plans with me today.
Anonymous wrote:Because it is tonight, I think your daughter has to be the bigger person and make good on the commitment.
It sounds like there was time (weeks? days?) that both the commitment and betrayal were known about. If your daughter was going to back out, it would have been understandable if she had communicated her decision when there was time for the formal friend to find a replacement or reschedule.
Anonymous wrote:I would make her go if it’s just mean girl drama (not racist/homophobic bullying). And that was the consensus on a thread about a babysitting class under similar circumstances before spring break too.
Anonymous wrote:Does the commitment involve other people who will be negatively affected by her absence? If so, she has to go. If she was going to help this friend clean her room so the friend could go to a party then DD can skip it.