Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be concerned for DD’s safety. Someone, whether a 17yo almost adult or quite possibly an actual adult is writing anonymous messages to a near-adult’s mother. That doesn’t sound healthy. Unhealthy people can have unhealthy thoughts and do unhealthy things. Whoever sent that note may be calling out for help but they’re calling to the wrong person the wrong way. Who knows what else that person may get wrong
+1
Can’t believe the appalling parents who do not seem to care at all about the safety of their children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I am still reading this thread and digesting things. I am not 100% sure what I intend to do, but I think I have settled on a couple things:
1. I am not responding to the email. I don’t see how any good can come of it under any scenario.
2. I am not going to the school. I don’t read the letter as threatening and in the absence of other information, I don’t see a reason to escalate yet. That could change. (FWIW, she goes to a public school).
3. I want to talk to my daughter. I still need to think this through more but I feel like we should talk about this at least generally.
I will say this, anyone who believes 17 year olds are over mean girl behavior and would not engage in ostracizing others is wrong. Some are still fully engage, but definitely to a lessor degree than when younger. I believe this, and I have seen it because I have a close group of sorority sisters from college and I have heard upsetting stories. I do not believe that is an indictment of my daughter, but I do not believe age alone absolves someone of being a mean girl (or person), which is why I am trying digest this instead of being reactionary (which I am inclined to do because I love my daughter and think she is a good person).
I admire your levelheaded approach and evident concern. I also don’t find the email threatening but agree that no answer is warranted. Good luck, OP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I received an (anonymous) email telling me my daughter is a mean girl. That she is gossipy, exclusionary and forces others to ostracize people she does not like. I am pretty sure the email was written by a peer based on the writing style and language.
How would you handle this? I don’t even know if this is real and telling my daughter about it could upset her. I do have not an inclination this is true, though I do know my daughter is popular and gets frustrated that there is an expectation she is everyone’s friend. But it’s also unsettling to get an email like this and the tenor of the email seemed sad and frustrated more than anything else, which makes my worry about the sender and what motivated this.
Sweet baby Jesus. You're the problem here. This is the reason she's a mean girl. "you don't want to upset her".
I’d be upset if I got an anonymous letter with outlandish accusations that included a threat but no substantive facts to support the outlandish accusations. Who wouldn’t be upset?
These are not “outlandish accusations.” This is behavior that can be found in most middle and high schools to some degree or another.
Also, it’s not a criminal indictment. What do you expect this person to do, get video footage of the bullying for you? Just because someone doesn’t have a CSI file on an event doesn’t mean they are lying about it. Most people do not walk around collecting hard evidence of every crappy thing someone does.
There was literally no evidence included. And by evidence I mean a narrative describing what OPs daughter did, when, who, etc. Literally anything to justify the accusations. As far as we know, there is absolutely nothing that resembles a fact for OP to even look into.
So yes, I’d be upset if I got an anonymous email accusing me of being a bully without any explanation of why the accusations were leveled, and including a threat. Who wouldn’t be upset? That is really disturbing.
That email reads like the ranting of an unhinged adult who is too enmeshed with her 17-year-old child. It has vibes like these cases:
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/cheer-mom-accused-sending-anonymous-texts-parents-girls-behavior-found-rcna21649
https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/bay-area-mom-who-cyberbullied-daughters-dates-gets-3-years-in-federal-prison/
Normal parents don’t do stuff like this, though apparently you and other PPs think this behavior is fine. To be clear, though, it is not remotely fine.
Normal parents of normal kids don’t get anonymous emails alleging bullying occurred.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I am still reading this thread and digesting things. I am not 100% sure what I intend to do, but I think I have settled on a couple things:
1. I am not responding to the email. I don’t see how any good can come of it under any scenario.
2. I am not going to the school. I don’t read the letter as threatening and in the absence of other information, I don’t see a reason to escalate yet. That could change. (FWIW, she goes to a public school).
3. I want to talk to my daughter. I still need to think this through more but I feel like we should talk about this at least generally.
I will say this, anyone who believes 17 year olds are over mean girl behavior and would not engage in ostracizing others is wrong. Some are still fully engage, but definitely to a lessor degree than when younger. I believe this, and I have seen it because I have a close group of sorority sisters from college and I have heard upsetting stories. I do not believe that is an indictment of my daughter, but I do not believe age alone absolves someone of being a mean girl (or person), which is why I am trying digest this instead of being reactionary (which I am inclined to do because I love my daughter and think she is a good person).
Anonymous wrote:Wow.
If I got this kind of an email, I would really err on the side of thinking it's true. Maybe that's wrong, but I would. What kid is going to go to those lengths to reach out to you with no good reason? How does a kid that age even get your email? They don't operate in the world of emails.
I would just be very transparent with my daughter and let her read it. And process it together and see what she says. Not in a...you're in trouble way...but let's talk way. If it's real, she should know and if someone would go to these lengths to send something untrue about her, she should also know and might have an idea who it is and then would interact with that person differently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I received an (anonymous) email telling me my daughter is a mean girl. That she is gossipy, exclusionary and forces others to ostracize people she does not like. I am pretty sure the email was written by a peer based on the writing style and language.
How would you handle this? I don’t even know if this is real and telling my daughter about it could upset her. I do have not an inclination this is true, though I do know my daughter is popular and gets frustrated that there is an expectation she is everyone’s friend. But it’s also unsettling to get an email like this and the tenor of the email seemed sad and frustrated more than anything else, which makes my worry about the sender and what motivated this.
Sweet baby Jesus. You're the problem here. This is the reason she's a mean girl. "you don't want to upset her".
I’d be upset if I got an anonymous letter with outlandish accusations that included a threat but no substantive facts to support the outlandish accusations. Who wouldn’t be upset?
These are not “outlandish accusations.” This is behavior that can be found in most middle and high schools to some degree or another.
Also, it’s not a criminal indictment. What do you expect this person to do, get video footage of the bullying for you? Just because someone doesn’t have a CSI file on an event doesn’t mean they are lying about it. Most people do not walk around collecting hard evidence of every crappy thing someone does.
There was literally no evidence included. And by evidence I mean a narrative describing what OPs daughter did, when, who, etc. Literally anything to justify the accusations. As far as we know, there is absolutely nothing that resembles a fact for OP to even look into.
So yes, I’d be upset if I got an anonymous email accusing me of being a bully without any explanation of why the accusations were leveled, and including a threat. Who wouldn’t be upset? That is really disturbing.
That email reads like the ranting of an unhinged adult who is too enmeshed with her 17-year-old child. It has vibes like these cases:
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/cheer-mom-accused-sending-anonymous-texts-parents-girls-behavior-found-rcna21649
https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/bay-area-mom-who-cyberbullied-daughters-dates-gets-3-years-in-federal-prison/
Normal parents don’t do stuff like this, though apparently you and other PPs think this behavior is fine. To be clear, though, it is not remotely fine.
Normal parents of normal kids don’t get anonymous emails alleging bullying occurred.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does track that DCUM is filled with posters who make a habit of sending anonymous emails and who are unhappy to learn that normal people view anonymous emails as creepy and threatening.
Amusing. Good point
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I received an (anonymous) email telling me my daughter is a mean girl. That she is gossipy, exclusionary and forces others to ostracize people she does not like. I am pretty sure the email was written by a peer based on the writing style and language.
How would you handle this? I don’t even know if this is real and telling my daughter about it could upset her. I do have not an inclination this is true, though I do know my daughter is popular and gets frustrated that there is an expectation she is everyone’s friend. But it’s also unsettling to get an email like this and the tenor of the email seemed sad and frustrated more than anything else, which makes my worry about the sender and what motivated this.
Sweet baby Jesus. You're the problem here. This is the reason she's a mean girl. "you don't want to upset her".
I’d be upset if I got an anonymous letter with outlandish accusations that included a threat but no substantive facts to support the outlandish accusations. Who wouldn’t be upset?
These are not “outlandish accusations.” This is behavior that can be found in most middle and high schools to some degree or another.
Also, it’s not a criminal indictment. What do you expect this person to do, get video footage of the bullying for you? Just because someone doesn’t have a CSI file on an event doesn’t mean they are lying about it. Most people do not walk around collecting hard evidence of every crappy thing someone does.
There was literally no evidence included. And by evidence I mean a narrative describing what OPs daughter did, when, who, etc. Literally anything to justify the accusations. As far as we know, there is absolutely nothing that resembles a fact for OP to even look into.
So yes, I’d be upset if I got an anonymous email accusing me of being a bully without any explanation of why the accusations were leveled, and including a threat. Who wouldn’t be upset? That is really disturbing.
That email reads like the ranting of an unhinged adult who is too enmeshed with her 17-year-old child. It has vibes like these cases:
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/cheer-mom-accused-sending-anonymous-texts-parents-girls-behavior-found-rcna21649
https://www.cbsnews.com/sanfrancisco/news/bay-area-mom-who-cyberbullied-daughters-dates-gets-3-years-in-federal-prison/
Normal parents don’t do stuff like this, though apparently you and other PPs think this behavior is fine. To be clear, though, it is not remotely fine.
Anonymous wrote:I would be concerned for DD’s safety. Someone, whether a 17yo almost adult or quite possibly an actual adult is writing anonymous messages to a near-adult’s mother. That doesn’t sound healthy. Unhealthy people can have unhealthy thoughts and do unhealthy things. Whoever sent that note may be calling out for help but they’re calling to the wrong person the wrong way. Who knows what else that person may get wrong
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I received an (anonymous) email telling me my daughter is a mean girl. That she is gossipy, exclusionary and forces others to ostracize people she does not like. I am pretty sure the email was written by a peer based on the writing style and language.
How would you handle this? I don’t even know if this is real and telling my daughter about it could upset her. I do have not an inclination this is true, though I do know my daughter is popular and gets frustrated that there is an expectation she is everyone’s friend. But it’s also unsettling to get an email like this and the tenor of the email seemed sad and frustrated more than anything else, which makes my worry about the sender and what motivated this.
Sweet baby Jesus. You're the problem here. This is the reason she's a mean girl. "you don't want to upset her".
I’d be upset if I got an anonymous letter with outlandish accusations that included a threat but no substantive facts to support the outlandish accusations. Who wouldn’t be upset?
These are not “outlandish accusations.” This is behavior that can be found in most middle and high schools to some degree or another.
Also, it’s not a criminal indictment. What do you expect this person to do, get video footage of the bullying for you? Just because someone doesn’t have a CSI file on an event doesn’t mean they are lying about it. Most people do not walk around collecting hard evidence of every crappy thing someone does.