Anonymous wrote:Op - the oldest one (10) is friends enough with the older kid to have had sleepovers with him and also with the other boys invited (and pretty regular playdates). Ie they are close enough that to not have been invited even absent the sibling thing would have been kind of a bummer. It’s totally fair that if the kid is not digging my kid he doesn’t have to invite him. But I think for older dc; watching your brother and father go to an occasion with a friend group you are just on the peripheral of is going to make existing feelings worse. I think it actually would have been better if they had invited neither kid and saved an invite for the younger dc to any occasion where it wasn’t all the kids together
Anonymous wrote:I think they’re being jerks but I’m curious what their side of the story would be. If the kids just aren’t good friends they should include your older son. However, is there a chance your kid had been mean to theirs, or said things that are inappropriate? Anything where they may have made a decision to not include yours because of behavior?
Anonymous wrote:
Oh that’s particularly painful when your child thinks they are friends and doesn’t realize the feeling isn’t mutual. How awkward of the mom for pointing that out to you though? Strange that she wasn’t just gracious about it. Do you think she assumed that you were just being nice or did she not realize your older daughter did think she was friends with her daughter?
Anonymous wrote:I must be missing something, as we have 2 kids and rarely are they invited to the same anything. Older one has a group of friends, younger one has a group of friends, and each group does their own thing. Why does your oldest need to be invited to things for your youngest? That's odd to me
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exact scenario happened a few years ago at our house where older DD thought she and the older sister were just as good of friends as younger DD and the younger sister of the other family. So naturally I would invite both sisters from the other family to do things with us. Until one day the mom kindly but very bluntly stated to me that it really wasn’t necessary to keep inviting the older one just because our younger girls are friends. It was a shock when she said this—-but the message was intentional.
At this point, all four were still in elementary school, and this was my first and only clue that the older sibling wanted nothing to do with my older DD, but clearly her daughter had made it clear to her mom that she was not friends with my older daughter. Ouch.
It was difficult, but I gently steered older DD away from continuing to invite the older sister along and started encouraging her to reach out to other friends.
Oh that’s particularly painful when your child thinks they are friends and doesn’t realize the feeling isn’t mutual. How awkward of the mom for pointing that out to you though? Strange that she wasn’t just gracious about it. Do you think she assumed that you were just being nice or did she not realize your older daughter did think she was friends with her daughter?
Anonymous wrote:Exact scenario happened a few years ago at our house where older DD thought she and the older sister were just as good of friends as younger DD and the younger sister of the other family. So naturally I would invite both sisters from the other family to do things with us. Until one day the mom kindly but very bluntly stated to me that it really wasn’t necessary to keep inviting the older one just because our younger girls are friends. It was a shock when she said this—-but the message was intentional.
At this point, all four were still in elementary school, and this was my first and only clue that the older sibling wanted nothing to do with my older DD, but clearly her daughter had made it clear to her mom that she was not friends with my older daughter. Ouch.
It was difficult, but I gently steered older DD away from continuing to invite the older sister along and started encouraging her to reach out to other friends.