Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No other kid owes your child friendship. It doesn't mean you have to like it. It is what it is. Teach your child how to exist amid their peers who ignore them, teach them to be strong.
This.
Not asking for friendship, I just find it incredibly disrespectful to ignore someone when they speak to you
They are 8 years old!! Again, you don’t know the reason why. Regardless, your kids are going to encounter mean people their entire lives — and much worse than this. The real lesson is teaching them not to let it fester in the same way an adult woman is letting an 8 year old girl take up real estate in her head. If the kid isn’t saying hello, your daughter can move on and focus her attention on those who reciprocate.
Yes, they are eight years old (insert multiple exclamation points here), not three. Plenty old to have some damn manners.
Anonymous wrote:Tell your DD to leave this girl alone. When she is ready to talk, she will. Why is this SO difficult for you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid doesn't have special needs and has friends but they are painfully shy. I think if you don't have a kid like this you just don't understand how hard it is for an introverted or shy kid to talk with anyone. She isn't doing anything mean, and you can tell your daughter to say hello to people just to say hello (like I might do on a walk) and that it is ok if this girl is different.
You keep labeling her as unfriendly, and now in your last post say mean. She may just take time to warm up to people.
It shouldn't grind your gears so bad that you and your kid are wrapped up in how the kid doesn't like her (which you could help frame it differently ) and you make a post about a young child on the DCUM board.
Oh, please. OP says they’ve known each other for years. “Take time to warm up to people?” You open your mouth and say “hi” back. If you can’t manage that for some absurd reason, you raise a hand and wave.
Stop coddling rude behavior.
Anonymous wrote:My kid is a different person morning bus stop and after school. She is not a morning person and doesn’t want to talk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No other kid owes your child friendship. It doesn't mean you have to like it. It is what it is. Teach your child how to exist amid their peers who ignore them, teach them to be strong.
This.
Not asking for friendship, I just find it incredibly disrespectful to ignore someone when they speak to you
They are 8 years old!! Again, you don’t know the reason why. Regardless, your kids are going to encounter mean people their entire lives — and much worse than this. The real lesson is teaching them not to let it fester in the same way an adult woman is letting an 8 year old girl take up real estate in her head. If the kid isn’t saying hello, your daughter can move on and focus her attention on those who reciprocate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should teach your kid to try to be kind. This other girl sounds like she might have anxiety or some ND. Especially with what you said about her mom. Teach your kid is not always about her.
Bullshit.
Eye-rolling brats with moms who snatch out about “mean girls” don’t have anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:My kid doesn't have special needs and has friends but they are painfully shy. I think if you don't have a kid like this you just don't understand how hard it is for an introverted or shy kid to talk with anyone. She isn't doing anything mean, and you can tell your daughter to say hello to people just to say hello (like I might do on a walk) and that it is ok if this girl is different.
You keep labeling her as unfriendly, and now in your last post say mean. She may just take time to warm up to people.
It shouldn't grind your gears so bad that you and your kid are wrapped up in how the kid doesn't like her (which you could help frame it differently ) and you make a post about a young child on the DCUM board.
Anonymous wrote:There’s a girl at DD’s bus stop
My question is… the mom of this girl is VERY vocal about kids not being friendly/kind/etc in our grade. It’s a frequent topic of hers… the hypocrisy is starting to grate on me. Would you say something the next time she brings this up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I just wanted to commiserate a bit. My DD has a girl like this in her dance class. DD is gregarious and loves dance, and greets her classmates and says goodbye to them by name. She doesn't pester or annoy them, just says "Hi Larla" or whatever. There is one classmate who not only never reciprocates but I have seen her visibly roll her eyes at my DD when she greets her. And again, it's not even some aggressive move -- I watched this interaction last week when we were leaving and my DD said "See you next week" to the girl in passing as we walked out, and the girl looked at her, grimaced, and rolled her eyes. Her mom was right there but I don't think saw the behavior.
I've taught my DD to be polite to other people and let her know that while she absolutely does not have to be friends with everyone, being polite costs you absolutely nothing. It's a shame how many other parents don't seem to bother with this.
Op here. Thank you!!! I’m shocked at how many people are like “oh well, who cares”. I’d be mortified if my DD acted like that. Even if this girl really doesn’t care for my DD, a simple “good morning” isn’t a huge ask.
Yes, I’m teaching DD to not worry when someone is unkind to her, but on the flip side, maybe this girls parents should teach their DD about general politeness