Anonymous wrote:Is it for sure a private school? OP didn't say. It could be a charter or one of the kids could be OOB.
Anonymous wrote:It is interesting the topics that people disagree the most on. I would love to read a psychologist's analyst of this...is there a certain kind of mom more likely to agree with OP? etc
Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine the other moms NOT gossiping about OP. (Such a princess, couldn't even take her own kid to the party, then wouldn't even meet Larlo's mom half-way to give back the suit HER kid took! etc etc etc etc. Unless private school moms are prissier and less practical than public-school moms.)
Everyone hates that mom who is a drama queen about having a baby, especially when it isn't her first parenting rodeo. Most people with more than one kid schlep the babies around and suck it up.
Anonymous wrote:I can't imagine the other moms NOT gossiping about OP. (Such a princess, couldn't even take her own kid to the party, then wouldn't even meet Larlo's mom half-way to give back the suit HER kid took! etc etc etc etc. Unless private school moms are prissier and less practical than public-school moms.)
Everyone hates that mom who is a drama queen about having a baby, especially when it isn't her first parenting rodeo. Most people with more than one kid schlep the babies around and suck it up.
Anonymous wrote:The other mom was right. You should have driven the swimsuit to her house. It doesn't matter what your inconveniences were. You should have said sorry I'll bring it right over, especially since they were leaving the next morning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child only has one suit, and it is THAT important, then why did you send it to a pool party the day before the trip and not check it to see if it came back? Some things are YOUR responsibility as a parent. (the probably only want that particular suit for pictures or something)
Taking your child to a party yourself or teaching them how to handle shit in your absence is also your responsibility as a parent. Guess OP missed the boat.
The kids are 7, still learning how to handle themselves. It's a good time to make (usually) small mistakes. Carpooling isnot a sin, nor is asking for help from others when you have a new baby.
So it's the other mom's fault for not checking the swimsuit (but maybe she did - OP's kid was already gone with the other one.) But not OP's fault at all for not going or checking. Having a baby absolves you of any responsibility? It all falls on everyone else? Ok, primadonna.
No, OP's kid made a mistake. It's not the other woman's fault. The only question is how much trouble is OP obligated to go to to return the suit. Is returning it on Monday enough, or must she do it at 10pm with two young children and a long drive, possibly in the rain. I probably would have done the drive, but it would have been the wrong decision, safetywise.
Also, in your response, you were blaming OP for not driving her child herself. That's unfair.
It makes no sense to blame OP. We do not know the entire story. Other mom should have checked before leaving or maybe other mom took the wrong swimsuit and is blaming OP child to make it easier for her. People lie all the time. A 10 year old with mom should be far more responsible than a 7 year old with a friend's parent who does not know their things.
Anonymous wrote:Two things I learned from reading this thread:
1. Thank god my kids go to charter school (private school parents sound horrible)
2. I don't think any one from DC has been to the Jersey Shore, hotels? Target? Haha.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child only has one suit, and it is THAT important, then why did you send it to a pool party the day before the trip and not check it to see if it came back? Some things are YOUR responsibility as a parent. (the probably only want that particular suit for pictures or something)
Taking your child to a party yourself or teaching them how to handle shit in your absence is also your responsibility as a parent. Guess OP missed the boat.
The kids are 7, still learning how to handle themselves. It's a good time to make (usually) small mistakes. Carpooling isnot a sin, nor is asking for help from others when you have a new baby.
So it's the other mom's fault for not checking the swimsuit (but maybe she did - OP's kid was already gone with the other one.) But not OP's fault at all for not going or checking. Having a baby absolves you of any responsibility? It all falls on everyone else? Ok, primadonna.
No, OP's kid made a mistake. It's not the other woman's fault. The only question is how much trouble is OP obligated to go to to return the suit. Is returning it on Monday enough, or must she do it at 10pm with two young children and a long drive, possibly in the rain. I probably would have done the drive, but it would have been the wrong decision, safetywise.
Also, in your response, you were blaming OP for not driving her child herself. That's unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child only has one suit, and it is THAT important, then why did you send it to a pool party the day before the trip and not check it to see if it came back? Some things are YOUR responsibility as a parent. (the probably only want that particular suit for pictures or something)
Taking your child to a party yourself or teaching them how to handle shit in your absence is also your responsibility as a parent. Guess OP missed the boat.
The kids are 7, still learning how to handle themselves. It's a good time to make (usually) small mistakes. Carpooling isnot a sin, nor is asking for help from others when you have a new baby.
So it's the other mom's fault for not checking the swimsuit (but maybe she did - OP's kid was already gone with the other one.) But not OP's fault at all for not going or checking. Having a baby absolves you of any responsibility? It all falls on everyone else? Ok, primadonna.