Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The petty in me would be tempted to host a really fun summer party and invite everyone except the older son and make sure to include the youngest.
Anyways, you should probably listen to someone else. Petty is probably not the best strategy.
Don't do this. I'm sure the older son has no control. Actually I would drop the parents
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stuff like this is why no one has friends anymore. Who needs to go through this? Why can’t people be inclusive.
I know right? People should start teaching their kids inclusivity. If there’s a small event coming up don’t invite the older one. Show your older child that sometimes there’s an event for just the younger ones. That might make him feel better to see it’s not personal.
There’s really no fixing the problem unless you’re honest with her and discuss how it confuses and hurts your son’s feelings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids?
If older than age 7, kids pick their own friends. I have two boys two years apart. When the kids were young (preschool and early elementary), we would do things together. We moved when boys were in second and fourth grade and there no group play dates. Now boys are 13 and 15 and there are several boys who brothers close together and there is not one set of two boys who hang out with my two boys. One is in middle school and one is in high school.
It is not cool to send siblings once kids are over age 7 or 8. This is drop off age.
When my boys were in preschool, there was a mom who had boys the exact same ages as my boys. She was very social and often invited my younger son. She never once invited my older son, including birthday parties. My older son said the kid was a jerk. Boys did not like one another. No big deal.
I now have 3 kids and I don’t like siblings at parties, play dates or outings. It is probably because I have teens now. It is just weird to throw in siblings who are not even friends.
This isn't the issue. The issue is they invited the younger son and the DH, while excluding the only other child. That is mean. If they wanted to just invited the younger son, I get that.
Anonymous wrote:Stuff like this is why no one has friends anymore. Who needs to go through this? Why can’t people be inclusive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It would be nice if they invited the older one, bu they aren't so move on. The kids aren't friends and as kids get older that happens.
This, I get. But to invite the brother and the dad? That does not feel like the kind of thing that happens with kind people.
Anonymous wrote:How old are the kids?
If older than age 7, kids pick their own friends. I have two boys two years apart. When the kids were young (preschool and early elementary), we would do things together. We moved when boys were in second and fourth grade and there no group play dates. Now boys are 13 and 15 and there are several boys who brothers close together and there is not one set of two boys who hang out with my two boys. One is in middle school and one is in high school.
It is not cool to send siblings once kids are over age 7 or 8. This is drop off age.
When my boys were in preschool, there was a mom who had boys the exact same ages as my boys. She was very social and often invited my younger son. She never once invited my older son, including birthday parties. My older son said the kid was a jerk. Boys did not like one another. No big deal.
I now have 3 kids and I don’t like siblings at parties, play dates or outings. It is probably because I have teens now. It is just weird to throw in siblings who are not even friends.
Anonymous wrote:It would be nice if they invited the older one, bu they aren't so move on. The kids aren't friends and as kids get older that happens.
Anonymous wrote:I would share this with the parents and ask whether older kid can be included, since they're all in the same friend AND sibling group.
BTDT with DC1 being excluded from invites for DC2, who was friends with the little sibling of DC1's supposed friend.