Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was definitely wrong of your daughter to bring it up (I taught my daughter at 6 years old to never talk to other friends about parties, because not everyone is always invited, and she gets it - why haven't you taught your daughter this yet??).
BUT why isn't anyone here talking about how rude it was of Sara's mom to call Amy's mom to ask why she wasn't invited?? This is middle school, land of mean girls. Sara's mom should have consoled Sara and explained how now that they're not in the same school, friendships change, she probably wasn't invited, no big deal, we'll do something fun or invite Amy over for a birthday play date, or something like that. I would *never* call another parent and ask why my daughter wasn't invited to something. That's so rude.
Pat yourself on the back pp![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is all the adults’ fault:
Amy’s mom shouldn’t have let Any exclude Sara
OP should’ve taught her daughter long ago never to mention parties if you aren’t 100% sure the other person HAS BEEN invited. Bringing up a party with “I’m sure you’ll get your invite” makes no sense. Everyone is invited at the same time. If Sara didn’t have an invite, one wasn’t coming.
Sara’s mom needed to not call the other moms and make a big deal about this. If someone doesn’t invite you to their party, you have to cope with that, not call people to get a pity invite.
THIS.
It was definitely wrong of your daughter to bring it up (I taught my daughter at 6 years old to never talk to other friends about parties, because not everyone is always invited, and she gets it - why haven't you taught your daughter this yet??).
BUT why isn't anyone here talking about how rude it was of Sara's mom to call Amy's mom to ask why she wasn't invited?? This is middle school, land of mean girls. Sara's mom should have consoled Sara and explained how now that they're not in the same school, friendships change, she probably wasn't invited, no big deal, we'll do something fun or invite Amy over for a birthday play date, or something like that. I would *never* call another parent and ask why my daughter wasn't invited to something. That's so rude.
Anonymous wrote:DH here. and please take this with a some humor...
But this kind of petty sht is precisely the drama that keeps women from ruling the world.
I this were a boy party, no father would have ever called the other father about their son being slighted on the party invite.
Maybe the party is something really nice that the girl is doing, maybe taking two freinds to hershey park or bush gardens, or some water park, spa day, mani pedi, ect. doesn't matter why the party was only for two friends. bummer that DD let it slip, but shes 10-12 and sometimes secrets are tough to keep. how did she know that her friend Sara wasn't the other freind that amy invited. life goes on...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would of told my daughter to boycott the party. What a mean girl not to invite her whole group. It's like she put the burden on the invitees rather than take responsibility for her exclusiveness.
Nobody is going to listen to advice from someone who says “would of”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would of told my daughter to boycott the party. What a mean girl not to invite her whole group. It's like she put the burden on the invitees rather than take responsibility for her exclusiveness.
Nobody is going to listen to advice from someone who says “would of”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would of told my daughter to boycott the party. What a mean girl not to invite her whole group. It's like she put the burden on the invitees rather than take responsibility for her exclusiveness.
Nobody is going to listen to advice from someone who says “would of”.
Anonymous wrote:I would of told my daughter to boycott the party. What a mean girl not to invite her whole group. It's like she put the burden on the invitees rather than take responsibility for her exclusiveness.
Anonymous wrote:DD is part of a group of four friends, all starting middle school this year. One friend, Amy has been best friends with other friend Sara for the past few years. All four friends went to the same elementary school until this past year when Sara switched schools. Amy is having her birthday party in a few weeks and didn’t invite Sara. She made it very clear on the invitation that only two friends were invited. She didn’t invite Sara because Sara is going to a different middle school than the other girls. So today my DD is hanging out with Sara and mentions that she will see her at the birthday. Sara says she didn’t get an invitation and my DD assures her that she probably will. After the play date Sara’s mom calls Amy’s mom to ask about the party and you can imagine how things went from there. I hate drama and feel absolutely terrible about this. There are so many hurt feelings as a result of this. I’ve talked to Amy’s mom and she has been very kind and gracious about my DD mistake. My DD is shy, quiet and doesn’t have too many friends. She is in absolute tears over this. She assumed Sara was invited because Sara and Amy were best friends. Honestly it’s usually my DD who gets left out, and she is used to it and knows it’s just part of life. I’m fairly antisocial myself and am unsure how DD and I should proceed at this point.
, I just told my daughter to take it in stride and develop relationships with other friends, which she has.
Anonymous wrote:OP why won't you answer this part though-
if it was "STATED VERY CLEARLY THAT ONLY 2 WERE INVITED" then why did your daughter act so stupidly?
I have no idea what she said... but I don't think the idea of calling over when we're dealing w/ 10-11 year olds (I'm assuming these are probably 5th graders from the OP's description) is weird at all.