Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 14 year old son texted about 10 different people to hang out today....all of them are "busy." The one friend that was available is now over an hour late to their planned meet up time. So sad and frustrated for my kid.
Your kid is going to have a hard time with a Tuesday play date at 14. Most kids have activities after school. That’s why they are busy. Or maybe they watch siblings or do homework.
Anonymous wrote:My 14 year old son texted about 10 different people to hang out today....all of them are "busy." The one friend that was available is now over an hour late to their planned meet up time. So sad and frustrated for my kid.
Glad to hear it Op. Thanks for following up on your thread. The middle school and high school crowds are tough at times. Wishing your son all the best!Anonymous wrote:Op here with an update: Tiny, tiny progress three years later. My now 16 year old has met up with one or two other kids for weekend lunches a couple of times per month since school started. These other kids do not go to his large public HS but he knows them through sports. It has been a long, sad road but I am grateful that he has had some social outlet these last few months. He still spends weekend evenings at home but at least has had some social contact outside of school. Baby steps and fingers crossed!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he want more or are you projecting your issues on to him? Why are others responsible for preventing your child's loneliness? We don't spend all our weekends with friends. Weekends are mostly family time with an occasional friend thing.
OP never suggested that. This sounds like a comment that would come from someone who's a bit sensitive about their lack of focus beyond themselves and their own, failing/not wanting to reach out to someone else because they don't need to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he want more or are you projecting your issues on to him? Why are others responsible for preventing your child's loneliness? We don't spend all our weekends with friends. Weekends are mostly family time with an occasional friend thing.
OP never suggested that. This sounds like a comment that would come from someone who's a bit sensitive about their lack of focus beyond themselves and their own, failing/not wanting to reach out to someone else because they don't need to.
Your own comment seems to imply it's my responsibility to reach out to someone who is not "my own". I think the assumption that everyone organizes weekends with lots of friend hangouts is incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:I’m disturbed and saddened by the number of posters on here normalizing kids, especially boys, having no friends or real-life social interactions. Male violence is a serious problem. Men are human and need love, friendship, community and interaction just as much as women do. Our culture just normalizes this sexist idea that boys and men are fine never expressing their feelings or having deep emotional intimacy, and then we wonder why men disproportionately commit antisocial behaviors later in life.
OP I’m not trying to be extreme and say your son will do anything bad later in life. But I am saying that your feeling that your son’s social isolation is bad is correct.
I don’t care if it’s becoming more common for teens to have no social life. It’s bad. It will lead to problems for their generation. As parents we should not encourage or accept it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he want more or are you projecting your issues on to him? Why are others responsible for preventing your child's loneliness? We don't spend all our weekends with friends. Weekends are mostly family time with an occasional friend thing.
OP never suggested that. This sounds like a comment that would come from someone who's a bit sensitive about their lack of focus beyond themselves and their own, failing/not wanting to reach out to someone else because they don't need to.