Anonymous wrote:Also, my son has some social skills issues due to ADHD, and has had some former friends no longer want to hang out with him. It was somewhat hurtful at the time (I was not close with their moms, just hurtful for DS). However, realistically, he was better off being on his own for a little bit and ultimately connecting with boys he has more in common with than for these kids to have invited him along to things or agreed to let him come out of pity. There are people who legitimately want to be friends with him, just not those particular boys, and he deserves better than to be someone's pity friend.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have an opportunity here to teach your DD why it was so hurtful to do what she did.
I get the sense that you won’t do that, because it sounds like you’re pretty haughty about your DD being the cool one.
Try modeling kindness maybe?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. I am the mom of a very artsy, creative teen who was dropped by several “cooler,” sportier girls, some of whose mothers are also my friends. Being on the other side of this, I really think moms need to back off and let the kids work it out. Yes, feelings get hurt and it’s very hard to go through, but intervening is not going to help. They’ll discover what THEY want out of their friendships, not what their moms want them to want. Forcing kids to include others that they don’t want around just makes it so painful and awkward for everyone.
The schools mine go to or have gone to don’t think someone’s cool because of the activities they pursue. The “cool” group are a bunch of kids who hang out together usually because they have excellent social skills, they are into boyfriends/girlfriends earlier than most and usually start drinking and having mixed parties before anyone else. Based on my experience the mean spirited girls are egged on my crazy mothers who obsess about popularity. There was one girl, chubby, unattractive, no outside interests but she was very popular because her mother orchestrated basement parties in their huge house, alcohol allowed. Crazy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have been tight with about six other moms since Kindergarten. Our girls have always been close. Moms genuinely close too. But I know it's always a danger to meet through kids - though I thought our friendship transcended this. I was maybe naive.
My DD has begun pulling away from one of the girls in the group. It is not personal. They have different interests. However, my DD is seen as a "cool" girl because she is sporty, and the other girl is more artsy and creative. Well apparently, there was a text spat between the girls - or some kind of misunderstanding - where the former friend wanted to hang out with DD and her new friends and my DD said no. The girl became incredibly upset, left school early, came come in tears, and the mom -- my friend -- got mad at me for allowing my DD to "drop" and bully her child.
I saw the texts and immediately talked to my own DD. My DD should have and could have been kinder in declining hanging out. But she wasn't bullying. She was excluding. But they just don't have anything in common and she does not really like this girl. But now the other mom is asking our friends to pick sides, complaining about my DD to our mutual friends, and wants to invite me to drinks to discuss what to do going into the new year.
I just feel sick over this whole thing and have zero desire to get involved in my child's social life in this way. I also do not want to raise a mean girl, but I think my kid should be able to drift from friends as a relationship ages out without repercussions. Anyone BTDT? I do still like the mother but this is putting a strain on our longtime circle.
You already did.
Genuinely curious: How so? Are people supposed to meet in K and remain friends for life?
OP said her daughter was being exclusionary, and unkind in the process. OP also attributes the separation between the girls and the resulting exclusion to her daughter being more "cool" than the artsy girl (what kind of a 90's movie are we in, btw?). So her daughter is unkindly excluding people for not being cool according to the standard at their particular school - that's pretty much the definition of a mean girl.
Of course OP also says "it's nothing personal" and then a few lines later says her daughter doesn't like the girl. She's all over the place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot to unpack here but what type of example are you setting for your daughter?
If she was mean to the other girl and purposely exclusionary just because she's weird/wears glasses/braces/whatever silly reason she needs to apologize.
OP here. No, she just is not friends with her any longer and has no desire to hang out with her. There isn't a silly reason - they grew apart. I talked with her about how to pull away more gracefully, but she's not just arbitrarily dropping someone due to wearing glasses.
It sounds like the other girl actually asked to hang out with your daughter and her new friends, and your daughter said no. Is that right?
That’s not “drifting away” from old friends due to a lack of shared interests. It is actually a little mean. Exclusion is one of the key types of relational aggression that girls engage in, I think.
So the other girl was trying to invite herself along and it didn't work. And y'all are blaming OP's DD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot to unpack here but what type of example are you setting for your daughter?
If she was mean to the other girl and purposely exclusionary just because she's weird/wears glasses/braces/whatever silly reason she needs to apologize.
OP here. No, she just is not friends with her any longer and has no desire to hang out with her. There isn't a silly reason - they grew apart. I talked with her about how to pull away more gracefully, but she's not just arbitrarily dropping someone due to wearing glasses.
It sounds like the other girl actually asked to hang out with your daughter and her new friends, and your daughter said no. Is that right?
That’s not “drifting away” from old friends due to a lack of shared interests. It is actually a little mean. Exclusion is one of the key types of relational aggression that girls engage in, I think.
So the other girl was trying to invite herself along and it didn't work. And y'all are blaming OP's DD?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve decided that unfortunately mom friends have an expiration date. It’s almost always too awkward to continue socializing when your kids are gojng in different directions. It’s a huge bummer.
But I think you should go for a drink with the other mom. Just say you are bummed the girls aren’t as close as they once were but kids grow up and make their own choices and it looks like your girls just aren’t in the same place right now. But you hope you adults can still be friends because you do really like hanging out. And maybe some day your daughters will find their way back to each other as friends. I e seen that happen too — in 3 years they could be in the same club and want to hang out again. This age is particularly rough because kids are trying on new identities and stuff is very much in flux.
Sadly this is true. I learned it the hard way when the women I thought were my closest friends scattered to the winds once our daughters were no longer a friend group (midway through DD's 8th grade year, after lots of drama). I was naive, and it took a long time for me to recover and to build new friendships elsewhere.
OP’s daughter invited the other girl to her birthday party, which seems to imply friendship. Then a few weeks later when the other girl asked if she could hang out with OP’s daughter and her new friends, OP’s daughter said no. It sounds like she was a little mean in the texts, or at least unkind
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot to unpack here but what type of example are you setting for your daughter?
If she was mean to the other girl and purposely exclusionary just because she's weird/wears glasses/braces/whatever silly reason she needs to apologize.
OP here. No, she just is not friends with her any longer and has no desire to hang out with her. There isn't a silly reason - they grew apart. I talked with her about how to pull away more gracefully, but she's not just arbitrarily dropping someone due to wearing glasses.
It sounds like the other girl actually asked to hang out with your daughter and her new friends, and your daughter said no. Is that right?
That’s not “drifting away” from old friends due to a lack of shared interests. It is actually a little mean. Exclusion is one of the key types of relational aggression that girls engage in, I think.
I agree. This girl has known OP's daughter for YEARS. Even if they aren't best friends, OP's daughter needs to be inclusive. Invite the girl to hang out until she finds her footing. It's the beginning of the school year/end of summer. Lots of friend groups are changing. Eventually the girl will find new friends or realize that OP's daughter doesn't want to be friends and start hanging out with only the other girls in the original group.
No, she doesn't. I'm starting to think some of you don't have kids or at least not t(w)eens.
I am not OP but I have a 7th grader, and there are friends my kid has known for YEARS, like since K... whom they talk to pretty much never. Friendly. Not enemies. But have drifted away. In different groups. No logical parent would say, "Oh yeah whatever you are doing now, you need to include those friends you have had since early elementary if they want to be included." I don't think the moms of even the most socially awkward kids I know would advocate for this.
Also - OP did not say that the other girl has no one to hang out with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot to unpack here but what type of example are you setting for your daughter?
If she was mean to the other girl and purposely exclusionary just because she's weird/wears glasses/braces/whatever silly reason she needs to apologize.
OP here. No, she just is not friends with her any longer and has no desire to hang out with her. There isn't a silly reason - they grew apart. I talked with her about how to pull away more gracefully, but she's not just arbitrarily dropping someone due to wearing glasses.
It sounds like the other girl actually asked to hang out with your daughter and her new friends, and your daughter said no. Is that right?
That’s not “drifting away” from old friends due to a lack of shared interests. It is actually a little mean. Exclusion is one of the key types of relational aggression that girls engage in, I think.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve decided that unfortunately mom friends have an expiration date. It’s almost always too awkward to continue socializing when your kids are gojng in different directions. It’s a huge bummer.
But I think you should go for a drink with the other mom. Just say you are bummed the girls aren’t as close as they once were but kids grow up and make their own choices and it looks like your girls just aren’t in the same place right now. But you hope you adults can still be friends because you do really like hanging out. And maybe some day your daughters will find their way back to each other as friends. I e seen that happen too — in 3 years they could be in the same club and want to hang out again. This age is particularly rough because kids are trying on new identities and stuff is very much in flux.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot to unpack here but what type of example are you setting for your daughter?
If she was mean to the other girl and purposely exclusionary just because she's weird/wears glasses/braces/whatever silly reason she needs to apologize.
OP here. No, she just is not friends with her any longer and has no desire to hang out with her. There isn't a silly reason - they grew apart. I talked with her about how to pull away more gracefully, but she's not just arbitrarily dropping someone due to wearing glasses.
It sounds like the other girl actually asked to hang out with your daughter and her new friends, and your daughter said no. Is that right?
That’s not “drifting away” from old friends due to a lack of shared interests. It is actually a little mean. Exclusion is one of the key types of relational aggression that girls engage in, I think.
I agree. This girl has known OP's daughter for YEARS. Even if they aren't best friends, OP's daughter needs to be inclusive. Invite the girl to hang out until she finds her footing. It's the beginning of the school year/end of summer. Lots of friend groups are changing. Eventually the girl will find new friends or realize that OP's daughter doesn't want to be friends and start hanging out with only the other girls in the original group.