Anonymous wrote:"We don't do sleepovers with boys, but I would be happy to pick you up late when the boys are getting ready for bed so that you can still go to the party"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a strange, red flag sleepover...
+1. Even without the sleepover, it seems an odd party. All boys and one (autistic) girl. Wouldn't she be the odd one out even without the sleepover? Because otherwise I'd say do a "sleep under" and pick her up late, but this party sounds unusual.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter was invited to a sleepover at the home of a child whose parents I don't know well. It's also a boy and her understanding is that the other invitees are all boys. This is for a birthday party. The children are 9 and 10 years old. I told her she cannot go because I don't know the parents well. She is very upset. She thinks I'm lying and it's because I will miss her! I told her it's about safety, but I do think I should explain this better. I don't want to tell her I think the dad or any of the boys could sexually assault her! Although in addition, I won't let her spend the night with people I don't know well for other safety reasons -- I have no idea how they run their home and what their safety rules would be at a party with a group of kids. I'm just not comfortable with it. I would let her stay at the party until the sleeping part and then come home. Anyway, when you tell your children they can't sleep over, what do you tell them is the reason. She's only 8, by the way. (Which feels like an additional reason this is a bad idea, but I also mention it re what to tell her. She's young and naive.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. I’m also pissed at the host parents for even issuing the invitation but I assume they feel like it doesn’t hurt to invite, and then people can say yes or no. They don’t see my daughter crying over and over and over about missing out.
Well, there you are out over your skis. The boundaries are: people invite, you get to say no. Your daughter is having a strong reaction to this, but that is not something they are responsible for foreseeing or heading off.
If you have not already talked to your daughter in plain language about sexual abuse, you need to do that.
Given what you have described, the "reason" about sleepovers could be: "It's important to keep your body safe and that includes when you are sleeping, so we do not sleep in the presence of people we don't know extremely well. I don't know these people extremely well, so that is the rule that applies here."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“No” because 9 year girls don’t have sleep overs with boys.
“No” because I am your mom and I said so.
You can’t go to an all boys sleepover. The end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just have a blanket no sleepover rule, which my husband insisted on before my kids were even born. I agreed based on experiences I had at sleepovers as a child. We’ve always told them “no sleepovers” just like we’ve always said “no pets”. They protest occasionally but it’s never been that big of a deal.
We always had a “no sleepovers until high school” rule for this exact reason. I never wanted to deal with arguing why a sleepover was okay with this family, but not that family. It turns out that almost all of my daughters’ friends’ parents had the same rule, so it was never an issue.
Anonymous wrote:“No” because 9 year girls don’t have sleep overs with boys.
“No” because I am your mom and I said so.
Anonymous wrote:What a strange, red flag sleepover...
Anonymous wrote:I'm really curious how your 8yo DD is close enough with older boys to be included in a sleepover invite but you don't know the family at all? I have an 8yo DD and just can't picture this happening! I'd also say no under the circumstances and just say I don't allow sleepovers when we don't know the family well (which is true).
some have worked well others less so but it's been a great experience for my dd. Anonymous wrote:We just have a blanket no sleepover rule, which my husband insisted on before my kids were even born. I agreed based on experiences I had at sleepovers as a child. We’ve always told them “no sleepovers” just like we’ve always said “no pets”. They protest occasionally but it’s never been that big of a deal.