Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD13 doesn’t have school tomorrow and is going home today with a new-ish friend and a couple other friends. They are going to see a movie. This morning DD asks if she can spend the night, that a sleepover has suddenly been planned and all of the girls are sleeping over. The mom is ok with it. No brothers in the house. Mom will be home the entire time. I’ve never met the mom in person, but I’ll shoot her a text. Would you be comfortable with this? They live about a mile away.
Yes, this is the how it works at this age.
How is "no brothers in the house" relevant to anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD13 doesn’t have school tomorrow and is going home today with a new-ish friend and a couple other friends. They are going to see a movie. This morning DD asks if she can spend the night, that a sleepover has suddenly been planned and all of the girls are sleeping over. The mom is ok with it. No brothers in the house. Mom will be home the entire time. I’ve never met the mom in person, but I’ll shoot her a text. Would you be comfortable with this? They live about a mile away.
Yes, this is the how it works at this age.
How is "no brothers in the house" relevant to anything?
Anonymous wrote:I'd be more concerned about the dad or any other adults being in the home as well as any guns in the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a no from me,
I understand everything will probably be fine OP- but go ahead and call the mom. Speak to her. I hate talking on the phone myself, but you have to got to elevate this beyond text.
How do you casually work this series of questions into the conversation
Do you own a gun?
Is your husband on the sex offenders list?
Any creepy uncles or other house guests?
"Thank you so much, this is so nice of you. I hope it's ok, just for my peace of mind- who will be home? where will the girls be sleeping? do you have any pets? Just wanted to check with you also- alcohol, weapons?" If you get a vibe you can throw in a comment like "Sorry don't mean to be over the top, but I've heard of some incidents" or whatever.
Also speak to your DD and tell her how to be smart and aware and safe.
And you don't have to be casual. These are fair questions. You don't have to be rude, it's just a conversation.
I've never understood the point of asking these questions. The parents you need to worry about wouldn't ever admit to having alcohol out for the kids to sneak or guns that weren't properly stored. They're not hooked up to a lie detector. It makes you feel better to ask, but doesn't change the underlying safety risk at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a no from me, dog.
Speaking of dogs, I was just thinking about this incident a couple of years ago where my friend was hosting a playdate, and her DD's friend got bit by their dog. I can't remember if stiches were involved, but there was definite bleeding. My other friends and I were rolling our eyes when we heard this-- because our friend and her DH can be way too laidback about things like this, and they don't understand that not everyone is. I am sure the girl's parents were furious and thought (erroneously) that if being bit was in the realm of possibility, the dog would be nowhere near their daughter. Nope.
Now these girls were still in elementary- but it speaks to the fact that parents have different values and judgment.
I understand everything will probably be fine OP- but go ahead and call the mom. Speak to her. I hate talking on the phone myself, but you have to got to elevate this beyond text.
So you would not allow sleepovers anywhere that there is a dog? You could stick your hand in my dog's mouth and she would not bite you. Almost every single person I know has a super friendly dog. The few friends that have dogs that are not 100% trustworthy around people are handled appropriately. What about mean cats?
Haha I have never heard of a cat biting someone needing stitches and if they did, it’s probably your fault. My daughter was bitten by a dog at a friends house and of course the owners said she is the sweetest dog and she’s never done that before. My DD was 6 and would never go near a big dog like that on her own. So yes, a big dog is a concern at a sleepover and I would expect the owner to keep it away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a no from me, dog.
Speaking of dogs, I was just thinking about this incident a couple of years ago where my friend was hosting a playdate, and her DD's friend got bit by their dog. I can't remember if stiches were involved, but there was definite bleeding. My other friends and I were rolling our eyes when we heard this-- because our friend and her DH can be way too laidback about things like this, and they don't understand that not everyone is. I am sure the girl's parents were furious and thought (erroneously) that if being bit was in the realm of possibility, the dog would be nowhere near their daughter. Nope.
Now these girls were still in elementary- but it speaks to the fact that parents have different values and judgment.
I understand everything will probably be fine OP- but go ahead and call the mom. Speak to her. I hate talking on the phone myself, but you have to got to elevate this beyond text.
So you would not allow sleepovers anywhere that there is a dog? You could stick your hand in my dog's mouth and she would not bite you. Almost every single person I know has a super friendly dog. The few friends that have dogs that are not 100% trustworthy around people are handled appropriately. What about mean cats?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a no from me, dog.
Speaking of dogs, I was just thinking about this incident a couple of years ago where my friend was hosting a playdate, and her DD's friend got bit by their dog. I can't remember if stiches were involved, but there was definite bleeding. My other friends and I were rolling our eyes when we heard this-- because our friend and her DH can be way too laidback about things like this, and they don't understand that not everyone is. I am sure the girl's parents were furious and thought (erroneously) that if being bit was in the realm of possibility, the dog would be nowhere near their daughter. Nope.
Now these girls were still in elementary- but it speaks to the fact that parents have different values and judgment.
I understand everything will probably be fine OP- but go ahead and call the mom. Speak to her. I hate talking on the phone myself, but you have to got to elevate this beyond text.
So you would not allow sleepovers anywhere that there is a dog? You could stick your hand in my dog's mouth and she would not bite you. Almost every single person I know has a super friendly dog. The few friends that have dogs that are not 100% trustworthy around people are handled appropriately. What about mean cats?