Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are they?
Those don’t sound particularly mean to me. Perhaps not overly constructively critical but feedback in sports on things to improve on is normal and may be what this girl hears from her own parents / coach.
Does the coach give constructive feedback? Can you daughter take feedback from others?
Who is she to criticize? Your daughter doesn’t need to hear from her classmate who has her own weaknesses to work on telling her what to do. Tell her “ take care of yourself. I don’t need or want your criticism.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD has a mean girl on her sports team. She is always saying mean things, criticizing players, cutting people down. My DD regularly comes home crying about it. At some point I just feel like “Yes, we know Larla is mean and says mean things. That does not mean what she says about you is true, it just means she’s not a nice person.”
But my DD takes it so personally. Like if this girl tells her she’s not good at her position, or she needs to try harder, or that she is “a lot.”
Is there any way I can help my DD not give this girl so much power over her?
Tell your kid to dish it back. Seriously, it will empower her. She doesn't have to say anything mean but something along the lines like:
"I'm surprised you feel comfortable saying that"
"That's an odd comment"
"That's a strange thing to say"
"Dang, didn't know you were such a hater"
With the exception of the last one those are things you’d say to your mother in law after a racist comment, not to a mean teenager
Anonymous wrote:My DD has a mean girl on her sports team. She is always saying mean things, criticizing players, cutting people down. My DD regularly comes home crying about it. At some point I just feel like “Yes, we know Larla is mean and says mean things. That does not mean what she says about you is true, it just means she’s not a nice person.”
But my DD takes it so personally. Like if this girl tells her she’s not good at her position, or she needs to try harder, or that she is “a lot.”
Is there any way I can help my DD not give this girl so much power over her?
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for sharing, your highness. Then ignore.
Anonymous wrote:“ Don’t you ever get tired of listening to yourself?”
“Do you ever shut up Brittany?”
“You again?”
All of these responses should be said quietly for her ears only.
Anonymous wrote:How old are they?
Those don’t sound particularly mean to me. Perhaps not overly constructively critical but feedback in sports on things to improve on is normal and may be what this girl hears from her own parents / coach.
Does the coach give constructive feedback? Can you daughter take feedback from others?
Anonymous wrote:My DD has a mean girl on her sports team. She is always saying mean things, criticizing players, cutting people down. My DD regularly comes home crying about it. At some point I just feel like “Yes, we know Larla is mean and says mean things. That does not mean what she says about you is true, it just means she’s not a nice person.”
But my DD takes it so personally. Like if this girl tells her she’s not good at her position, or she needs to try harder, or that she is “a lot.”
Is there any way I can help my DD not give this girl so much power over her?
Anonymous wrote:I tell my kids don't get mad, don't get sad. Don't let the bullies see that they got to DD.
She does need a couple one-liners in her back pocket. She needs to say something brief ( a few words at most) every single time. Don't take it silently and don't have an emotional outburst or cry. Just a calm response, not nasty but definitely pushing back.
Oh, and if this is volleyball then DD needs to leave. My DD wanted to go into volleyball but I said no because the culture so toxic and rife with mean girls, especially at our MS/HS. Plus there's very little chance of it turning into a college admit or scholarship, so it seemed like a ton of drama for no real upside.