Anonymous wrote:That girl is amazing and her response is perfect. The men suck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The friend was an insensitive jerk, and the father was wrong for not defending his daughter against his own friend's ruse comments. However, I do think it was reasonable for the father to have told off the daughter for snapping. That wouldn't fly in our house either: we have high standards for how our children are expected to interact with adults, in a way she was a host or at age 16 at least sort of a representative of her parents who were the hosts of this guest, and byou that age she should have or be really working on developing the social skills to show grace under fire in such situations.
I think she did handle it with grace by telling the friend he was insensitive.
No reason why if friend acts like a jackass a 16 year old can’t call him on it. It’s one thing to be respectful to adults, it’s another thing to teach your kids to just take it when they get treated like crap. Speaking up was allowable in this situation, IMHO.
Speaking up is allowable but at least in OP's telling, the way she said it was rude. She should have said "excuse me Mr. X, I don't care to discuss my dating life" or "excuse me, but that's my business and I'm not interested in discussing it." Still assertive, maybe even more so, but more socially correct on the surface.
That said, she's 16. If a parent's friend had asked me anything inappropriate about my love life when I was 16, I probably would have mumbled something and then fled to my room and cried.
Anonymous wrote:Parents need to teach sensitive Larla to lighten up. By your own admission she's insecure about the fact that she has no boyfriend. Pandering to her insecurity, allowing her to believe that everyone should be handling her insecure little self with kid gloves is doing her no favors.
Parents like the PPs on this thread are why we have legions of snowflakes in college.
Anonymous wrote:Someone in the daughter's life raised her right. Dad's friend was certainly inappropriate, made more so by the fact that it was a middle aged man saying this to a teen girl, which is just gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The friend was an insensitive jerk, and the father was wrong for not defending his daughter against his own friend's ruse comments. However, I do think it was reasonable for the father to have told off the daughter for snapping. That wouldn't fly in our house either: we have high standards for how our children are expected to interact with adults, in a way she was a host or at age 16 at least sort of a representative of her parents who were the hosts of this guest, and byou that age she should have or be really working on developing the social skills to show grace under fire in such situations.
I think she did handle it with grace by telling the friend he was insensitive.
No reason why if friend acts like a jackass a 16 year old can’t call him on it. It’s one thing to be respectful to adults, it’s another thing to teach your kids to just take it when they get treated like crap. Speaking up was allowable in this situation, IMHO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The situation:
A sixteen year old girl, who has never had a boyfriend and who is sensitive about this, wanders into the room where her dad is sitting with his oldest friend. The friend has a wife and a daughter of his own, who is daughter's age. The friend looks at daughter and says, "So, Larla, why don't you have a boyfriend? Are you a lesbian?" And Larla snaps at the dad's friend that "what you're saying is really insensitive."
Dad tells off daughter for being rude to his friend.
I think the friend WAS insensitive. Daughter is embarrassed about not having a boyfriend, especially when around dad's friend's daughter, who is very popular at their school. Her father should have defended her, right?
Tell us what the kid really said because what you wrote did not come out of a 16 yo mouth.