Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s one weekend - it won’t derail local friendships. And you could find out about the supervision provided if you tried.
If you’re that worried invite the friend to stay with you. You can supervise and have all the local friends over to see the visitor.
I’m sorry, I should have been more clear: I’m not driving 12 hours in one weekend so my DD can spend the night, and I don’t think that’s unreasonable. But my 13yo doesn’t understand that reason because she’s thinking emotionally since her other friend has been multiple times, which, in and of itself I find bizarre.
That’s logical, but I am suspicious that it took you three tries to come up with that reason.
Your DD can probably sense that, whatever you claim, this is absolutely about you not liking the kid who moved away. (Which might be justified, of course, but you aren’t being up front with DD and she can tell.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter and I were invited for a holiday weekend that turned out to be less than 12 hours.
My daughter was looking forward to it for weeks while I quietly had my reservations as the host mom reduced our time there. She had gotten some free tickets to a nearby museum there the next morning but didn't trust us in her house for two hours by ourselves so let us know that we had to leave the next morning.
I knew if I cancelled, my daughter would never let it go so I spent the money on expensive train tickets and dinner there. On the way back the next day my daughter said that it wasn't worth the trip. As I had suspected, she had to experience the early return in order to process how short the visit was.
Sometimes it is best for them to go thru the motions in order to understand the high investment of their time.
When it involves mom’s time to help then understand (12 hours total of driving!) or an expensive train ticket, hell no.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter and I were invited for a holiday weekend that turned out to be less than 12 hours.
My daughter was looking forward to it for weeks while I quietly had my reservations as the host mom reduced our time there. She had gotten some free tickets to a nearby museum there the next morning but didn't trust us in her house for two hours by ourselves so let us know that we had to leave the next morning.
I knew if I cancelled, my daughter would never let it go so I spent the money on expensive train tickets and dinner there. On the way back the next day my daughter said that it wasn't worth the trip. As I had suspected, she had to experience the early return in order to process how short the visit was.
Sometimes it is best for them to go thru the motions in order to understand the high investment of their time.
Anonymous wrote:Just say no. It’s ok. If the reasoning is you don’t like her influence I absolutely would not send her there for the weekend and wouldn’t want her at our house for the weekend either. It’s ok to say weekend trips aren’t going to happen.