Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This is good advice.
I would not be intervening in teenagers' friendships; the other mom is setting a bad example for her daughter and putting you all in an awkward position. Encourage kindness, don't allow bullying, but also don't force your child to be friends with people she's outgrown. Women are told to just be nice and not hurt people's feelings too often . . . relationships are a two way street and no one should be forced to walk down the road with someone they don't really like.
There's no such thing as outgrowing a friend and you can never have too many friends. You don't have to stay besties, but there's no reason to completely drop a long time friend (without cause at least). Just keep being kind and respectful and let things fall where they may.
This is very naive and untrue.
Yeah I don't buy that outgrowing friends is a thing. If a friendship dissolves, it's usually for a bigger reason. Plenty of kids stay friends even if new friends are made and kids discover other interests
Yep. I still have friends from as far back as middle school, and I am in my 40s.
I have " outgrown" some friends. There are bigger reasons behind every friend I have outgrown.
You all don't think outgrowing friends *in childhood* is a thing? Huh? Kids grow and change - adolescents especially so. "Outgrowing" may not be the best phrasing - maybe growing along different paths? Growing apart? That absolutely happens, as kids/teens choose different activities, grow different parts of their personalities, etc. And my best friend is someone I've known since I was three years old (40+ years ago) - but I know that's not the norm.
I'm not saying the OP's DD handled the situation well, I have no clue. But thinking that people, particularly children, don't grow apart as they age is bizarre.
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:Anonymous wrote: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.
This is good advice.
I would not be intervening in teenagers' friendships; the other mom is setting a bad example for her daughter and putting you all in an awkward position. Encourage kindness, don't allow bullying, but also don't force your child to be friends with people she's outgrown. Women are told to just be nice and not hurt people's feelings too often . . . relationships are a two way street and no one should be forced to walk down the road with someone they don't really like.
There's no such thing as outgrowing a friend and you can never have too many friends. You don't have to stay besties, but there's no reason to completely drop a long time friend (without cause at least). Just keep being kind and respectful and let things fall where they may.
This is very naive and untrue.
Yeah I don't buy that outgrowing friends is a thing. If a friendship dissolves, it's usually for a bigger reason. Plenty of kids stay friends even if new friends are made and kids discover other interests
Yep. I still have friends from as far back as middle school, and I am in my 40s.
I have " outgrown" some friends. There are bigger reasons behind every friend I have outgrown.
You all don't think outgrowing friends *in childhood* is a thing? Huh? Kids grow and change - adolescents especially so. "Outgrowing" may not be the best phrasing - maybe growing along different paths? Growing apart? That absolutely happens, as kids/teens choose different activities, grow different parts of their personalities, etc. And my best friend is someone I've known since I was three years old (40+ years ago) - but I know that's not the norm.
I'm not saying the OP's DD handled the situation well, I have no clue. But thinking that people, particularly children, don't grow apart as they age is bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This is good advice.
I would not be intervening in teenagers' friendships; the other mom is setting a bad example for her daughter and putting you all in an awkward position. Encourage kindness, don't allow bullying, but also don't force your child to be friends with people she's outgrown. Women are told to just be nice and not hurt people's feelings too often . . . relationships are a two way street and no one should be forced to walk down the road with someone they don't really like.
There's no such thing as outgrowing a friend and you can never have too many friends. You don't have to stay besties, but there's no reason to completely drop a long time friend (without cause at least). Just keep being kind and respectful and let things fall where they may.
This is very naive and untrue.
Yeah I don't buy that outgrowing friends is a thing. If a friendship dissolves, it's usually for a bigger reason. Plenty of kids stay friends even if new friends are made and kids discover other interests
Yep. I still have friends from as far back as middle school, and I am in my 40s.
I have " outgrown" some friends. There are bigger reasons behind every friend I have outgrown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This is good advice.
I would not be intervening in teenagers' friendships; the other mom is setting a bad example for her daughter and putting you all in an awkward position. Encourage kindness, don't allow bullying, but also don't force your child to be friends with people she's outgrown. Women are told to just be nice and not hurt people's feelings too often . . . relationships are a two way street and no one should be forced to walk down the road with someone they don't really like.
There's no such thing as outgrowing a friend and you can never have too many friends. You don't have to stay besties, but there's no reason to completely drop a long time friend (without cause at least). Just keep being kind and respectful and let things fall where they may.
This is very naive and untrue.
Yeah I don't buy that outgrowing friends is a thing. If a friendship dissolves, it's usually for a bigger reason. Plenty of kids stay friends even if new friends are made and kids discover other interests
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
This is good advice.
I would not be intervening in teenagers' friendships; the other mom is setting a bad example for her daughter and putting you all in an awkward position. Encourage kindness, don't allow bullying, but also don't force your child to be friends with people she's outgrown. Women are told to just be nice and not hurt people's feelings too often . . . relationships are a two way street and no one should be forced to walk down the road with someone they don't really like.
There's no such thing as outgrowing a friend and you can never have too many friends. You don't have to stay besties, but there's no reason to completely drop a long time friend (without cause at least). Just keep being kind and respectful and let things fall where they may.
This is very naive and untrue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other mom: how dare you exclude my child!
Also other mom: let's exclude OP!
OP: Justifying why her kid is excluding and being a mean girl.
Also OP: I'm being excluded and other mom is being mean.
Nahhh. "other mom" made a mountain over a molehill. The other mom is off her rocker.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other mom: how dare you exclude my child!
Also other mom: let's exclude OP!
OP: Justifying why her kid is excluding and being a mean girl.
Also OP: I'm being excluded and other mom is being mean.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other mom: how dare you exclude my child!
Also other mom: let's exclude OP!
OP: Justifying why her kid is excluding and being a mean girl.
Also OP: I'm being excluded and other mom is being mean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Other mom: how dare you exclude my child!
Also other mom: let's exclude OP!
OP: Justifying why her kid is excluding and being a mean girl.
Also OP: I'm being excluded and other mom is being mean.
Anonymous wrote:Other mom: how dare you exclude my child!
Also other mom: let's exclude OP!
Anonymous wrote: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.
This is good advice.
I would not be intervening in teenagers' friendships; the other mom is setting a bad example for her daughter and putting you all in an awkward position. Encourage kindness, don't allow bullying, but also don't force your child to be friends with people she's outgrown. Women are told to just be nice and not hurt people's feelings too often . . . relationships are a two way street and no one should be forced to walk down the road with someone they don't really like.
There's no such thing as outgrowing a friend and you can never have too many friends. You don't have to stay besties, but there's no reason to completely drop a long time friend (without cause at least). Just keep being kind and respectful and let things fall where they may.