Anonymous wrote:I don't want to be popular, but I do wish I were closer to other parents to help set up social opportunities (zoom calls or whatever, eventually more playdates) now.
Anonymous wrote:
Yeah, we know. It’s like rubbernecking a wreck on the highway, op.
There’s one mom chronically being left out of neighborhood events—even a car parade in her neighborhood. People are so petty that they won’t extend a silly invite to a car parade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No but I couldn’t even identify this group of moms at my child’s school. Sounds like something that might happen in the suburbs?
Oh FFS. Like drama doesn’t happen in cities![]()
Anonymous wrote:
Yeah, we know. It’s like rubbernecking a wreck on the highway, op.
There’s one mom chronically being left out of neighborhood events—even a car parade in her neighborhood. People are so petty that they won’t extend a silly invite to a car parade.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t even know who those people are.
Anonymous wrote:No but I couldn’t even identify this group of moms at my child’s school. Sounds like something that might happen in the suburbs?
Anonymous wrote:In all seriousness though the popular mom cliques in the DC area are people that are total losers anywhere else. So I’m good.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a biglaw attorney. I feel very frozen out of the SAHM/mommy track clique at my kids’ private. I don’t even think about it 95% of the time (I’m a younger mom and most of my friends are still childless so I have a busy social life) but I do feel the sting at school events.
Anonymous wrote:I once heard one mom gush to another, “you’re the most popular mom in the school yearbook!”