Anonymous wrote:All you can do is make sure that ALL of the other parents know exactly what happened - those twins went into a private area of the house that they knew was strictly off-limits and did a thousand dollars of damage by being stupid in there. And the parent's response - that they expected that their kids can't behave and that OP should have expected it too, and locked the door.
I'm guessing the twins won't be allowed anywhere for a while. And obviously never back to your house.
And your son can only have 1 friend at a time now since he obviously can't control his guests.
Anonymous wrote:I would never have called the twins’ parents. That’s crazy town in my book. I would never have mentioned it. I would also punish my ds for not controlling his playmates by not invited those boys over again and maybe limiting guests to one at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let it go and don't invite the children over again. Explain to your son that the number of guests he has over at once needs to decline, and brainstorm with him how he would have handled the situation if he had broken items belonging to a host (i.e. use this as a learning experience).
You need to clean up the mess. Leaving it there is only going to inflame you further. Personally even if they had offered, I wouldn't let 11 year olds clean an area filled with shattered glass anyway.
This. I am very worried about how your son is responding to all of this. It sounds like he was trying to do the right thing but his guests were out of control and then you went out of control, too. He is 11. He must be very scared if you totally lost it. You may need to spend some time rebuilding his trust in you.
Use the suggestions above and also recognize that perhaps you should have been monitoring the children a little bit better. If they were in a room they weren't supposed to be in, and you didn't know, that is a pretty big sign that they needed to be more closely monitored.
I agree that it doesn't sound safe to have an 11 year old boy cleaning up broken shards and shattered glass.
Anonymous wrote:I would never have called the twins’ parents. That’s crazy town in my book. I would never have mentioned it. I would also punish my ds for not controlling his playmates by not invited those boys over again and maybe limiting guests to one at a time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP Again. Thanks for all the feedback. I warned all of the other parents to watch out for people like this. My son decided himself to never invite those kids again, and I'm also in the process of getting my broken camera shipped so it can be replaced. Thank God for the warranty I purchased. I'm going to try to find some glue tomorrow to start repairing as many glass birds as I can. Once again, thanks for the help.
Umm . . . what now?
See, OP, you had been reasonable (other than your weird obsession with glass birds, but hey, everyone has their thing). But not you're traveling to crazytown, it appears.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry op. If you have that breakable of things in your home you need to do a better job of protecting them. It sounds like they bumped into the shelf. They didn’t pick up your birds and throw them. They bumped into a shelf. Why would you have such a precarious set up in the first place? I understand that room is off limits but it also sounds like your ds chased the boys into the room. Sorry, I don’t believe your precious ds is innocent. And since you can’t prove your version of the story I’ll Continue to think your ds chasing them is possible.
If a parent called me and asked for money? I’d seriously hang up and laugh, and share the story with dh.
Anonymous wrote:OP Again. Thanks for all the feedback. I warned all of the other parents to watch out for people like this. My son decided himself to never invite those kids again, and I'm also in the process of getting my broken camera shipped so it can be replaced. Thank God for the warranty I purchased. I'm going to try to find some glue tomorrow to start repairing as many glass birds as I can. Once again, thanks for the help.
Anonymous wrote:I remember in preschool my kid was invited to a mansion for a playdate and they wanted me to do drop off. As soon as I saw all the expensive breakables EVERYWHERE I stayed. To be honest that same kid is now 12 and I would not leave him there. He is polite and respectful, but clumsy and it is NOT a kid friendly house.
I think kids should respect boundaries, but if you have a fancy pants room with fancy things you may want to go over the rules at the beginning and lock the door.
Anonymous wrote:I remember in preschool my kid was invited to a mansion for a playdate and they wanted me to do drop off. As soon as I saw all the expensive breakables EVERYWHERE I stayed. To be honest that same kid is now 12 and I would not leave him there. He is polite and respectful, but clumsy and it is NOT a kid friendly house.
I think kids should respect boundaries, but if you have a fancy pants room with fancy things you may want to go over the rules at the beginning and lock the door.