Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family just experienced this too! I have a 10 year old daughter. She has been invited to birthday sleepovers by people I don't really know and neither of us have been to each other's homes.
She was also invited by another mother/daughter from our school to stay the entire weekend 3 hours away at their beach house! Keep in mind that we didn't "know" much about these two different families! I politely declined and I told both mothers that I do not allow my child to stay overnight with ANYONE until we know a lot about them such as what they allow in their household. I told them it was nothing personal but I have two siblings that were molested by "friends of the family". I know most people won't understand your reasoning but as parents, we must protect our children, no matter how much we may be ridiculed!
Next time, just say no. Don’t give out all that personal info.
Anonymous wrote:
No, I would not allow it.
No sleepover with people I don't know well.
I guess I'm old-fashioned, but there it is.
Anonymous wrote:My family just experienced this too! I have a 10 year old daughter. She has been invited to birthday sleepovers by people I don't really know and neither of us have been to each other's homes.
She was also invited by another mother/daughter from our school to stay the entire weekend 3 hours away at their beach house! Keep in mind that we didn't "know" much about these two different families! I politely declined and I told both mothers that I do not allow my child to stay overnight with ANYONE until we know a lot about them such as what they allow in their household. I told them it was nothing personal but I have two siblings that were molested by "friends of the family". I know most people won't understand your reasoning but as parents, we must protect our children, no matter how much we may be ridiculed!
Anonymous wrote:I would want to know more about the family and would be hesitant too. I absolutely would not allow someone to take my child 3 hours away who I did not know, especially if they ask for money and do not have detailed plan when they do the invite (i.e. transportation, lodging, who is going, sleeping arrangements, food, who is paying for it all - she should).
No works well for me.
Anonymous wrote:I would say no to group sleepovers with kids I didn't know.
If she was good friends with a girl in middle school, she'd have a sleepover just with that girl or maybe one other friend, first. That's how you get to know the other girl ad the karen(s).
But to just be invited to a large group sleepover, when you don't know the other kids who will be there, or the parent -- I don't think that's a good idea.
No, absolutly no to a trip 3 hours away with someone you don't know.
Anonymous wrote:When my DS was around 14, he invited a few kids to a sleepover ( it wasn't a birthday so no official invite). One boy called my son (on the landline) and told him "My dad needs to talk to one of your parents." The dad asked me if my husband and I planned to be in the home for the entire evening? We were and the boy was allowed to visit. Personally, I was impressed with the dad AND with the son who knew this was "the rule" in their house. So to the OP, I believe you should make the rules and make sure your child understands them.