Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
Or, the ES friends gained more mature interests and they didn’t have as much in common with your DD anymore?
Starting in middle school, kids are no longer as obligated to be friends due to proximity and parent friendship. It’s a bummer when your kid can’t make new friends, when these friends are lost, but usually inability to make friends is probably a sign it’s more than just all the other kids being mean or only wanting popularity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
Or, the ES friends gained more mature interests and they didn’t have as much in common with your DD anymore?
Starting in middle school, kids are no longer as obligated to be friends due to proximity and parent friendship. It’s a bummer when your kid can’t make new friends, when these friends are lost, but usually inability to make friends is probably a sign it’s more than just all the other kids being mean or only wanting popularity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
Or, the ES friends gained more mature interests and they didn’t have as much in common with your DD anymore?
Starting in middle school, kids are no longer as obligated to be friends due to proximity and parent friendship. It’s a bummer when your kid can’t make new friends, when these friends are lost, but usually inability to make friends is probably a sign it’s more than just all the other kids being mean or only wanting popularity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
Anonymous wrote:Do 7th graders tend to find new friends or stick with the same from 6th? I realize that's hard to generalize but DD is worried she won't make new friends next year-- two of her good buddies are moving (overseas) and another longtime friend just isn't her cup of tea anymore. I keep telling her she'll make new friends next year based on who is in her classes/doing the same activites...but is that really true? Thankfully she has great friends outside of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
What do you really want the parents to do? They can encourage kindness, but it’s hard to force a child to hang out with someone they don’t like anymore. (And my kid was excluded by his old friends , so I am not just one of popular kids’ parents).
Parents care way too much if their kids is a cool or popular. I've seen it to many times on here with threads. "Is my kid too old for.." or "my tween, young teen is still acting like a kid." As for this thread, contrary to what ppl believe friends don't usually ditch friends for just differing interests or activities. It is usually for a bigger reasond and what kids believe is a good reason.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
What do you really want the parents to do? They can encourage kindness, but it’s hard to force a child to hang out with someone they don’t like anymore. (And my kid was excluded by his old friends , so I am not just one of popular kids’ parents).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
What do you really want the parents to do? They can encourage kindness, but it’s hard to force a child to hang out with someone they don’t like anymore. (And my kid was excluded by his old friends , so I am not just one of popular kids’ parents).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
Not having a 10 person themed Halloween group (excluding 2-3 of the prior “friends”) and then posting it all over social would be a decent start. But I’m sure you don’t see a problem with that either. And no my kid doesn’t have social or a phone. Someone at school told her, plus the kids openly discuss it and when asked if she can join, was told the group is “full”, and then proceeded to let others join.
What do you really want the parents to do? They can encourage kindness, but it’s hard to force a child to hang out with someone they don’t like anymore. (And my kid was excluded by his old friends , so I am not just one of popular kids’ parents).
Anonymous wrote:It depends on the kid, not the age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Both my kids have very different friend groups than they had in 6th grade
This is true but it happens slowly and not all at once. My younger DD is in 7th now and still struggling to find her people. Her ES friends decided they were too cool for her in MS. It’s been really hard. I’m sure their parents don’t care as long as their kid is popular.