Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Until you deal with your issues, there will be issues with another family in your new neighborhood.
You also need to help your daughter build up some self esteem. She shouldn't be running over there every time she's invited. Teach her to stand up for herself "No Molly. I don't want to come over. You always invite someone else and then you both ignore me. It's mean and I dont want to hang out with you anymore" Obviously that needs a lot of work.
The best thing you can do right now is teach your DD to grow a backbone. Otherwise the jealousy and approval monster is going to eat her up, just like it did to you.
Agreed. This is a parenting issue, not a real estate issue. You can teach your daughter that she doesn't have to accept mean behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - therapist suggests I befriend them to "humanize" them instead of idolizing from a distance, but it hasn't worked. They have their own friends in our town and have accepted our invites, and then gone off somewhere afterward. It felt stilted and unnatural.
And what did your therapist say when you told her you wanted to move over this issue?
That I should do what would make sense for our family. She didn't call it a bad idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - therapist suggests I befriend them to "humanize" them instead of idolizing from a distance, but it hasn't worked. They have their own friends in our town and have accepted our invites, and then gone off somewhere afterward. It felt stilted and unnatural.
And what did your therapist say when you told her you wanted to move over this issue?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - therapist suggests I befriend them to "humanize" them instead of idolizing from a distance, but it hasn't worked. They have their own friends in our town and have accepted our invites, and then gone off somewhere afterward. It felt stilted and unnatural.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - therapist suggests I befriend them to "humanize" them instead of idolizing from a distance, but it hasn't worked. They have their own friends in our town and have accepted our invites, and then gone off somewhere afterward. It felt stilted and unnatural.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Until you deal with your issues, there will be issues with another family in your new neighborhood.
You also need to help your daughter build up some self esteem. She shouldn't be running over there every time she's invited. Teach her to stand up for herself "No Molly. I don't want to come over. You always invite someone else and then you both ignore me. It's mean and I dont want to hang out with you anymore" Obviously that needs a lot of work.
The best thing you can do right now is teach your DD to grow a backbone. Otherwise the jealousy and approval monster is going to eat her up, just like it did to you.
Agreed. This is a parenting issue, not a real estate issue. You can teach your daughter that she doesn't have to accept mean behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Until you deal with your issues, there will be issues with another family in your new neighborhood.
You also need to help your daughter build up some self esteem. She shouldn't be running over there every time she's invited. Teach her to stand up for herself "No Molly. I don't want to come over. You always invite someone else and then you both ignore me. It's mean and I dont want to hang out with you anymore" Obviously that needs a lot of work.
The best thing you can do right now is teach your DD to grow a backbone. Otherwise the jealousy and approval monster is going to eat her up, just like it did to you.
Agreed. This is a parenting issue, not a real estate issue. You can teach your daughter that she doesn't have to accept mean behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you are going to screw up your daughter 1000x worse than any neighbor could if you don’t throw yourself into fixing your envy issues.
Tips?