Anonymous wrote:We are from NYC where apartments are normal and also they are small. Most play dates are in public spaces and tbh I do not want random children in my living space. Keep it a temple. We only have home playdates with families we are friends with. First meetups are at the museum like a family day or something like that, or the park. Model how to not care about other peoples judging, by not caring 🤗
Anonymous wrote:We moved to DC last fall from a pretty dense urban area where most of our friends lived in apartments, as we did there.
Now we're in a new apartment in downtown DC. Most of the kids in her class (she's in third grade) apparently live in houses. Apartment living never bothered her in the past, but she's suddenly become very embarrassed by it, to the point where she doesn't want to ask friends over. (Which puts us in an odd position, not being able to host others' kids after they have hosted ours.)
As far as I can tell, none of her friends or adults have teased her about living in an apartment. She's just noticed it, in this new context, and says she "feels poor now." (We're not: just middle-class people in an expensive city. We have no plans to buy a house here - can't afford one, and we likely will not be here for more than a few years.)
Anyone dealt with this before? Do kids get over the "embarrassed" feeling after a while? Anything you can do to make them feel more secure?
Anonymous wrote:We live in a house and DD (4th grade) has a friend who lives in an apartment. She thinks it's the coolest thing ever -- they have an elevator! and a balcony! Why don't we have an elevator?!![]()
If you are friendly with the parents of any of her friends, perhaps invite a whole family over for dinner so the focus is less on just DD and her own friend. Hopefully, just having one friend over and it going well will help her get over it.
Anonymous wrote:We moved to DC last fall from a pretty dense urban area where most of our friends lived in apartments, as we did there.
Now we're in a new apartment in downtown DC. Most of the kids in her class (she's in third grade) apparently live in houses. Apartment living never bothered her in the past, but she's suddenly become very embarrassed by it, to the point where she doesn't want to ask friends over. (Which puts us in an odd position, not being able to host others' kids after they have hosted ours.)
As far as I can tell, none of her friends or adults have teased her about living in an apartment. She's just noticed it, in this new context, and says she "feels poor now." (We're not: just middle-class people in an expensive city. We have no plans to buy a house here - can't afford one, and we likely will not be here for more than a few years.)
Anyone dealt with this before? Do kids get over the "embarrassed" feeling after a while? Anything you can do to make them feel more secure?
Anonymous wrote:My DD in first grade definitely noticed our SFH was smaller than her friend's SFH. So, yes, they notice.
Not the actual ones, of course, but what they think.