Anonymous wrote:You don't need to vacation with other families to keep his social life healthy. Invite a friend to go to dinner and do something fun every now and then. Or lunch and a trampoline park. Or just to come play video games. As your kid gets older this involves you less and less.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's hard to get objective info on this thread because everyone just wants to validate that what they did was the right thing.
I think this is personality driven and that past age 8 or 9, parent relationships are fairly irrelevant to kid friendships. For little kids, the parents have to know each other and at least get along somewhat because there's more parent supervision and management involved. Kindergarteners are not independently setting up playdates with each other. But 4th graders are, and just checking with parents to see if they are okay.
I have always taken a colleagues approach to other parents -- friendly, helpful when appropriate, no drama. I have not become good friends with other parents because (1) I already have a lot of friends, and (2) I think having same age kids is less bonding than people expect it to be. Individual parenting experiences are more diverse than people realize, and past the baby phase, kids vary a lot in temperament (plus families vary a lot in composition, resources, and particular experiences). I think people presume "hey we live in the same neighborhood and have 2nd graders -- we must have a lot in common!" But my experience is that you often have exactly one thing in common and that's it, and it's just not enough to build a friendship on.
But! It's enough to be friendly work colleagues so if your kids become friends, you can functionally support that friendship. So that's my approach.
Anonymous wrote:You don't need to vacation with other families to keep his social life healthy. Invite a friend to go to dinner and do something fun every now and then. Or lunch and a trampoline park. Or just to come play video games. As your kid gets older this involves you less and less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to keep in mind that K-8 socializing is as much about the parents as their kids. I wasn't huge into the parent social swirl, either. I'm an ambivert, which means I'm equally introverted and extroverted. I think my problem is I see through people's facades, masks, way too easily. I can read body language even when I don't want to. So I catch the subtle eye roll, etc. I could spot the fake moms who would sell me out, gossip behind my back, or be mean to my kids within minutes of being around them. I'm very choosy about who I let into my world, my circle is small. Our kids always had a few friends and I always had one or two mom friends. High school moms are competing against each other and building hierarchies around their kids' activities. You'll know these moms by their shirts because they tend to create a special tshirt for their "in mom" group that they all wear at the same time. It's very high school -- you're bang on, OP. It' a-okay to keep your dignity. I have zero regrets about keeping mine. --Mom of college kids
I have never heard about this. Is this different from simple "boosters"? Is it more "we wear pink"?
This sounds crazy and not subtle at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, it doesn’t matter. Your child will make friends in school and in the neighborhood without you doing anything at all. As she gets older she can plan and schedule what she wants. Did your parents plan out bunches of social engagements for you in elementary school? Mine certainly didn’t and I still had a great social life. I have three kids: high, middle, and elementary. The families we were friends with and vacationed with in elementary- our kids are no longer close friends with. They all find their own paths. We never did play dates- it makes no difference to their social lives.
To me this is so odd! Growing up, I would have a friend over after school at LEAST once a week. Or go to their house. Having friends over after school was so normal, and it was where our friendships really got deeper. Now, vacationing with another family- that's something that seems so foreign to me. I don't want to share a beach house with another family just because our kids are the same age and like eachother. No.
Anonymous wrote:You have to keep in mind that K-8 socializing is as much about the parents as their kids. I wasn't huge into the parent social swirl, either. I'm an ambivert, which means I'm equally introverted and extroverted. I think my problem is I see through people's facades, masks, way too easily. I can read body language even when I don't want to. So I catch the subtle eye roll, etc. I could spot the fake moms who would sell me out, gossip behind my back, or be mean to my kids within minutes of being around them. I'm very choosy about who I let into my world, my circle is small. Our kids always had a few friends and I always had one or two mom friends. High school moms are competing against each other and building hierarchies around their kids' activities. You'll know these moms by their shirts because they tend to create a special tshirt for their "in mom" group that they all wear at the same time. It's very high school -- you're bang on, OP. It' a-okay to keep your dignity. I have zero regrets about keeping mine. --Mom of college kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think its important if you have an only child. I also have an only, shes 13 now and I think its important over the years that they learn that not everything revolves around them and we need to take other peoples needs into consideration as far as taking turns, choosing games to play etc.
Meh. My only child learned all that stuff at school and with friends and gets along well with others. No need to take multi-family vacations or constantly schedule parent-group social events for that.
Most only children I know have become fairly awkward adults... I don't mean introverted, more like needy - require attention or validation of some sort. Seems like this could have been mitigated by having them participate in more group activities as kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think its important if you have an only child. I also have an only, shes 13 now and I think its important over the years that they learn that not everything revolves around them and we need to take other peoples needs into consideration as far as taking turns, choosing games to play etc.
Meh. My only child learned all that stuff at school and with friends and gets along well with others. No need to take multi-family vacations or constantly schedule parent-group social events for that.
Most only children I know have become fairly awkward adults... I don't mean introverted, more like needy - require attention or validation of some sort. Seems like this could have been mitigated by having them participate in more group activities as kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think its important if you have an only child. I also have an only, shes 13 now and I think its important over the years that they learn that not everything revolves around them and we need to take other peoples needs into consideration as far as taking turns, choosing games to play etc.
Meh. My only child learned all that stuff at school and with friends and gets along well with others. No need to take multi-family vacations or constantly schedule parent-group social events for that.