Anonymous wrote:
Goodness, that's so stereotypical.
The kids who want a sleepover, the dads who don't communicate correctly, and the mother left doing everything...
I would have reached out to the mother and said that I did not expect a sleepover, but that we could do one. The other family has to get their act together too. And you lecture your kid and husband. Find out who omitted what.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If my daughter did this at the age of 11, I would let it go and roll with it ONCE. But after Sara left i would tell my daughter "Net time you pull this crap, not only will I tell your friend and her parent you didn't have permission for a sleepover but because you were sneaky about it the fun was now cancelled and I'm sorry but [Sara] has to leave now. I WILL humiliate you in front of your friend if you lie and sneak."
Well that escalated quickly.....
Anonymous wrote:If my daughter did this at the age of 11, I would let it go and roll with it ONCE. But after Sara left i would tell my daughter "Net time you pull this crap, not only will I tell your friend and her parent you didn't have permission for a sleepover but because you were sneaky about it the fun was now cancelled and I'm sorry but [Sara] has to leave now. I WILL humiliate you in front of your friend if you lie and sneak."
Anonymous wrote:Oh, they totally planned that on their own. At that age with that plan, I’d think nothing of it if my kid said it was a sleepover.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious how old DD and her friend are.
They're 6th graders... so 11/12yrs.
LOL. No, there was no miscommunication. They totally planned this. I thought you were going to say Sara and your DD were 6.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious how old DD and her friend are.
They're 6th graders... so 11/12yrs.
Pro-tip: Stop referring to the times when your 6th grader gets together with a friend as a “play date.” Your daughter invited a friend over.