Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would ignore it - it is anonymous and it could be any crazy person if they don't put their name too it - so I would give it less credence. But I would keep an eye out on how you think her behavior is towards others.
Hmm, crazy kids do crazy things. All the more reason to take it up with the school.
Why would you take it up with the school? I see nothing in the original post to reference anything that occurred at school.
If a 17 YO is in a headspace where she needs to go to a peer’s parent with a message, something is wrong. Either OP’s kid is a mean girl, and the emailer is crying out for help, or the emailer is a bully and doubling down on picking on OP’s kid. Who knows? Not here to litigate that. But I would want to school to be aware so that the emailer doesn’t feel ignored and then escalate. You can’t be too careful. What if emailer harms herself or OP’s kid?
What is the school going to do with an anonymous email? Seriously asking that question. I don't think they are detectives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the sender is the mean girl trying to stir up drama? I would probably ask vague social dynamics questions of my kid and if it seems like something is off, probably share the anonymous email with the school counselor. Nothing is truly anonymous. If a kid is sending that kind of message, then the school has a problem they need to address.
Let's walk this through. I'm a teenage mean girl. I want to pick on my "victim" who is popular. My go to move is I anonymously email her parents? That's not very gratifying at all. What does that accomplish exactly?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would ignore it - it is anonymous and it could be any crazy person if they don't put their name too it - so I would give it less credence. But I would keep an eye out on how you think her behavior is towards others.
Hmm, crazy kids do crazy things. All the more reason to take it up with the school.
Why would you take it up with the school? I see nothing in the original post to reference anything that occurred at school.
If a 17 YO is in a headspace where she needs to go to a peer’s parent with a message, something is wrong. Either OP’s kid is a mean girl, and the emailer is crying out for help, or the emailer is a bully and doubling down on picking on OP’s kid. Who knows? Not here to litigate that. But I would want to school to be aware so that the emailer doesn’t feel ignored and then escalate. You can’t be too careful. What if emailer harms herself or OP’s kid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had this happen to my son
I had a meeting with the boy, his mom, the school counselors and my son.
It went like this.
Counselor: Joe do you feel Rob excludes you on recess.
Joe: no Rob like soccer and football, I like to look for bugs.
Rob: I like to look for bugs would you like me to join you sometime
Joe: no not really
End of meeting.
This is a tween/teen forum. I don't think this is analogous to one boy looking for bugs and one boy playing soccer at recess.
It was middle school.
You have recess in middle school and there are kids looking for bugs at that age? That is a whole other post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is the mean girl. It's probably true.
My general impression from what my kids tell me is the "popular" girls in middle school (assuming it's this age group) are in fact pretty mean and awful. There is a lot of drama and talking about others and pushing kids out of the group and changing alliances. And a lot of paranoia about losing status.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would ignore it - it is anonymous and it could be any crazy person if they don't put their name too it - so I would give it less credence. But I would keep an eye out on how you think her behavior is towards others.
Hmm, crazy kids do crazy things. All the more reason to take it up with the school.
Why would you take it up with the school? I see nothing in the original post to reference anything that occurred at school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The description of your DD as a popular girl who is frustrated with expectations that she is friends with everyone is sending up red flags for me. Like Gretchen Wieners cluelessly saying I can’t help it that I’m popular.
OP here, and I will not lie, I also see those comment is a slightly different light.
I am inclined not to respond to the email, so I perhaps the best course is to talk to my daughter more generally about the issue?
FWIW, I am not ruling out the possibility this is true. But it’s my kid, so it’s really tough to think it could be true. I feel like I have always emphasized kindness and not gossiping.
Push past this. I see this blind spot in so many parents.
NP. So? Even a mean girl should be loved unconditionally by her mother. And at 17, this is not something that OP is going to fix. It's going to have to come from the DD.
Anonymous wrote:Talk to your daughter - if I understand correctly that she is 17, this situation seems a bit odd for the age group. Usually by the last years of HS the kids have settled into their friend groups and it's not as cliquey...the whole thing just seems off to me - but def. talk to her frankly about it.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
It's good that you want to address this. I think it's possible that your daughter is indeed a "mean girl." That doesn't mean she's a bad person -- she's just a tween. It's an opportunity for growth.
I don't think I would mention the email, as her focus might shift into figuring out who sent it....That's human nature. But I would talk to her about the general topic of bullying, ask her how it might feel to be unpopular or teased, ask what's happening at her own school, etc. Maybe watch an age-appropriate movie together where a kid a bullied. Your daughter may not have ever had the experience of being the odd kid out so doesn't know how it feels.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would ignore it - it is anonymous and it could be any crazy person if they don't put their name too it - so I would give it less credence. But I would keep an eye out on how you think her behavior is towards others.
Hmm, crazy kids do crazy things. All the more reason to take it up with the school.