Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is in 9th at an area girls school (since we are not naming schools, I will just call them the Gators). It has not been at all what we were hoping. She loved her visitation day and felt the girls were so nice. Now, at school, the cliques are terrible. She does have a few nice friends, but they are left out of everything else. And the moms are even worse. We are still figuring out what to do about next year. I really regret sending her.
OP here. We are at the same school. Gators. She’s been there a long time, had a really good group of friends, but lately it’s just been cliquish and unkindness. What’s really coming out is that we have basically raised our kids to be compassionate and empathetic people but the other parents have raised their kids to be so competitive, it’s a real win at all costs attitude. She still has some good friends, but the hurt feelings of broken friendships without explanation and being excluded has worn her down. We are trying to figure out what to do for next year too, which is why I posted the original post. We can’t go to Madeira, it’s a million miles from us in Bethesda.
Anonymous wrote:I guess I’m asking where are the least sucky girls? LOL. BCC? Field? Holy Child? Burke? SJC?
Anonymous wrote:I guess I’m asking where are the least sucky girls? LOL. BCC? Field? Holy Child? Burke? SJC?
Anonymous wrote:OP here again. Our local public is BCC. Any thoughts on the kids there? Don’t want to pull her out of her current school then put her with another unkind group.
Anonymous wrote:My DD had a similar situation when she was a sophomore Her tight group of friends fragmented with one being the lead in getting nasty and dividing the group. Our DD was upset as she had never experienced something like this but just powered through. We coached her on bigger picture as best we could but teenage years are so tough.
The "nasty" girl came around and our DD learned a valuable lesson. Through it all, she kept her head up even though we could see she was hurting. It also strengthened friendships with other girls who were suffering the same. Those girls are now still tight tight going into their junior year of college. None of them speak to the mean girl anymore.
It's so hard for them to trust at this stage that it will all work out. But it usually does work itself out....and while it may seem like the end of the world, it's just a very short blip in their lives. Encourage her to keep her head up, focus on the right priorities and friend(s) and ignore the noise.
..and...This may sound harsh but I have no other way to say it
Don't feed the drama with school changes etc and I'm not saying the drama is on her. BUT she is NOT a victim and she needs to know that and she needs to find a way to deal with it. She is going to have similar issues at other schools and in life. Enable and encourage her to find a path through it all and not just become a "victim". Life is NOT EASY! Why continue to pretend that it is? Let her know this is the first of many tough situations she will face and she is more than capable of getting through it.
She can do this! And she can rock it despite the challenges....don't let her give in/up. Life lesson...
Thank you. I really appreciate the advice, all of it.
Anonymous wrote:My DD had a similar situation when she was a sophomore Her tight group of friends fragmented with one being the lead in getting nasty and dividing the group. Our DD was upset as she had never experienced something like this but just powered through. We coached her on bigger picture as best we could but teenage years are so tough.
The "nasty" girl came around and our DD learned a valuable lesson. Through it all, she kept her head up even though we could see she was hurting. It also strengthened friendships with other girls who were suffering the same. Those girls are now still tight tight going into their junior year of college. None of them speak to the mean girl anymore.
It's so hard for them to trust at this stage that it will all work out. But it usually does work itself out....and while it may seem like the end of the world, it's just a very short blip in their lives. Encourage her to keep her head up, focus on the right priorities and friend(s) and ignore the noise.
..and...This may sound harsh but I have no other way to say it
Don't feed the drama with school changes etc and I'm not saying the drama is on her. BUT she is NOT a victim and she needs to know that and she needs to find a way to deal with it. She is going to have similar issues at other schools and in life. Enable and encourage her to find a path through it all and not just become a "victim". Life is NOT EASY! Why continue to pretend that it is? Let her know this is the first of many tough situations she will face and she is more than capable of getting through it.
She can do this! And she can rock it despite the challenges....don't let her give in/up. Life lesson...