Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is on a sports team. OP, you’re getting some very bad advice in here. Tread carefully. I’d take it to sports forum. You’re getting a lot of young parents or parents of unathletic kids.
Agreed. Most of these comments sound like they are coming fro parents of 5 year olds on rec leagues and posters who have never played a sport. None of the comments were mean or bullying. People clearly don't even know what those words mean anymore.
Anonymous wrote:This is on a sports team. OP, you’re getting some very bad advice in here. Tread carefully. I’d take it to sports forum. You’re getting a lot of young parents or parents of unathletic kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is on a sports team. OP, you’re getting some very bad advice in here. Tread carefully. I’d take it to sports forum. You’re getting a lot of young parents or parents of unathletic kids.
How you know my kid not athletic fool
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell your daughter to ignore. When the girl says something mean, have your daughter stare at her and then walk away. Teach your daughter that people are allowed to say whatever they want and she can not control that but she can control how she reacts. People tend to say mean things to get a reaction out of people so don’t give them a reaction.
Ignoring reaaaaaallly doesn’t work on bullies (although I like a good death stare). They will just escalate. She needs to give it back and show she’s not intimidated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are they?
Those don’t sound particularly mean to me. Perhaps not overly constructively critical but feedback in sports on things to improve on is normal and may be what this girl hears from her own parents / coach.
Does the coach give constructive feedback? Can you daughter take feedback from others?
Who is she to criticize? Your daughter doesn’t need to hear from her classmate who has her own weaknesses to work on telling her what to do. Tell her “ take care of yourself. I don’t need or want your criticism.”
lol. She’s going to sound like a dorky mom. Sports teams get really mean at this age. My daughter is naturally very kind and empathetic, but the spurts she plays does not attract nice girls, nor does it attract nice parents. I’ve told my daughter this comes with in it if she wants to play, this sport. I don’t wznt her to accept this treatment, but she has to put in a game face. Tell your daughter to keep a poker face (or rbf) and not be friendly to this girl. When she offers unsolicited feedback, your daughter either needs to act like she didn’t say anything or give it a few minutes and offer a similarly critical critique of her performance. Keep it business, don’t make it obviously mean, do the girl doesn’t have ammo to make mean girl behavior involving other teammates and your daughter. Just have your daughter make it very unattractive for this teammate to approach your daughter.
Anonymous wrote:This is on a sports team. OP, you’re getting some very bad advice in here. Tread carefully. I’d take it to sports forum. You’re getting a lot of young parents or parents of unathletic kids.
Anonymous wrote:Most of my kids inherited my dry,sarcastic humor, and they were capable of finding a way to flip it back to the bully with a subtext of, do it again and you will regret it for the rest of your life.
One of them is so sweet and kind that he just can’t summon that energy. I taught him to smile big and say things like, “Thanks! It’s cool that you’re so interested!”
They teach all of this social emotional learning but it only works when the other kids and parents buy in. There are always some nasty ones out there. I’d have a hard time with a coach allowing their authority to be undermined like that; teammates don’t coach.
Anonymous wrote:My DD has a mean girl on her sports team. She is always saying mean things, criticizing players, cutting people down. My DD regularly comes home crying about it. At some point I just feel like “Yes, we know Larla is mean and says mean things. That does not mean what she says about you is true, it just means she’s not a nice person.”
But my DD takes it so personally. Like if this girl tells her she’s not good at her position, or she needs to try harder, or that she is “a lot.”
Is there any way I can help my DD not give this girl so much power over her?
Anonymous wrote:Tell your daughter to ignore. When the girl says something mean, have your daughter stare at her and then walk away. Teach your daughter that people are allowed to say whatever they want and she can not control that but she can control how she reacts. People tend to say mean things to get a reaction out of people so don’t give them a reaction.