Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No explanation needed.
I'm sorry, the car pool is no longer working for us.
If you need resolve, consider this: you don't want your DD to be a wuss. Set an example.
The DD is complaining about "lack of downtime". That's not really the kind of thing I would pick for my DC to "take a stand" about. And the example you are suggesting is that the mom show that time for personal relaxing is more important than a commitment to a group. Please.
OP, drive your carpool day. If you are willing to bail your DD out the other days, then fine, drive her alone. But frankly it's not a very good reason to end a car pool.
Anonymous wrote:No explanation needed.
I'm sorry, the car pool is no longer working for us.
If you need resolve, consider this: you don't want your DD to be a wuss. Set an example.
The DD is complaining about "lack of downtime". That's not really the kind of thing I would pick for my DC to "take a stand" about. And the example you are suggesting is that the mom show that time for personal relaxing is more important than a commitment to a group. Please.
Anonymous wrote:Are you picking up and dropping off at people’s houses? For larger carpools I’ve done we always meet at and pick up from the driver’s house.
Don’t feel bad about dropping out. Circumstances change. One family isn’t driving at all (that would piss me off). Just tell them it isn’t working for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should continue your one day for the rest of the year. If they ask you next year, you say you can’t because of x.
If you drop out now, you’ll be burning bridges for your daughter.
It really is unfair to the carpool for you to break your commitment.
How is it breaking her commitment if she keeps driving her one day but her daughter doesn't participate on the other days. That sounds like she's giving the other folks a break.
Am I missing something here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should continue your one day for the rest of the year. If they ask you next year, you say you can’t because of x.
If you drop out now, you’ll be burning bridges for your daughter.
It really is unfair to the carpool for you to break your commitment.
Anonymous wrote:I think you just need to be honest, give a few weeks notice and get out. I'm one of those on a different thread that posted about hating carpools. My kids aren't big fans either - sometimes it's necessary, but when it's not, you should just no, and don't sign up next year.
But then you can't ask for favors either -if you bail on them, you can't decide you later need their help...
Anonymous wrote:
I like the option of driving your one day of the week, and not doing the rest. Great idea! I hate carpools, but I wouldn't renege on your part of the commitment, especially if one family cannot drive at all.
Anonymous wrote:No explanation needed.
I'm sorry, the car pool is no longer working for us.
If you need resolve, consider this: you don't want your DD to be a wuss. Set an example.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should continue your one day for the rest of the year. If they ask you next year, you say you can’t because of x.
If you drop out now, you’ll be burning bridges for your daughter.
It really is unfair to the carpool for you to break your commitment.