Anonymous wrote:So, I was on the other side of this a few years ago. Had trouble getting play dates for my son. Turns out 1. I was asking the wrong people (we discovered he had two great friends from the other class the next year) and 2. One mom who I texted told me no thank you, because her son says my son hits. She was nice about it and I honestly appreciated it. I’m not sure if it was true. This was pre-k, and my son had some sensory processing issues that he has since outgrown.
Anonymous wrote:You sound like a gossipy jerk. Give the child a chance and see for yourself what his/her behavior is. You may be surprised.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would ignore the people who are talking badly about a CHILD and schedule a weekend morning park playdate. Judge from there with your own eyes.
You got that one of the people talking badly about the CHILD is OP's own child, right? Who does not want a playdate with this kid because he hits and threatens other kids?
Anonymous wrote:I would ignore the people who are talking badly about a CHILD and schedule a weekend morning park playdate. Judge from there with your own eyes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not big into gossip. I'd probably schedule a neutral playdate at a park or something and form my own opinions. People can be so nasty. I don't trust much of what anyone says.
+10000. I had a (toxic) former mom friend that crap talked perfectly lovely kids to anyone that would listen. Anyone but her own special snowflake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks all, I got some helpful advice here. My child did NOT want a playdate with this classmate. So if I were to arrange one, I'd be forcing one on my child, and also, it probably would not go well. I don't want to force my child to be put in that position.
And this was not just gossip. I heard the stories from my own child, and it was confirmed by other parents. The principal had to come in and physically remove the child from the other classmates.
I'm empathetic that some kids are really struggling and they are acting out. There's been a lot of that going on in the schools. But I also feel protective of my own child who is anxious about school and experienced a different classmate punching him in the face repeatedly while screaming death threats. At some point you have to draw the line.
Next time be more clear in your OP.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks all, I got some helpful advice here. My child did NOT want a playdate with this classmate. So if I were to arrange one, I'd be forcing one on my child, and also, it probably would not go well. I don't want to force my child to be put in that position.
And this was not just gossip. I heard the stories from my own child, and it was confirmed by other parents. The principal had to come in and physically remove the child from the other classmates.
I'm empathetic that some kids are really struggling and they are acting out. There's been a lot of that going on in the schools. But I also feel protective of my own child who is anxious about school and experienced a different classmate punching him in the face repeatedly while screaming death threats. At some point you have to draw the line.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks all, I got some helpful advice here. My child did NOT want a playdate with this classmate. So if I were to arrange one, I'd be forcing one on my child, and also, it probably would not go well. I don't want to force my child to be put in that position.
And this was not just gossip. I heard the stories from my own child, and it was confirmed by other parents. The principal had to come in and physically remove the child from the other classmates.
I'm empathetic that some kids are really struggling and they are acting out. There's been a lot of that going on in the schools. But I also feel protective of my own child who is anxious about school and experienced a different classmate punching him in the face repeatedly while screaming death threats. At some point you have to draw the line.