Anonymous wrote:OP here. No I haven't really made mom friends in the sense that I would invite one out for coffee or lunch and they would accept, or who are interested in getting to know me. More mom friends in the sense that if I had a question about something I would feel comfortable texting to ask, but we don't meet up without the kids. I wish I could make mom friends in the class or at the school, but none of them seem interested, and most are all friends with each other.
Yes, my child is an only. I've noticed that the families with same age kids all hang out together and are family friends, and that unfortunately leaves us with no families to hang out with since my kid is the only only child in the class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:you’re using living in an apartment as an excuse. It’s part of your life story not an excuse for letting your kids have friends over. Kids don’t care about space or how big your houses is.Anonymous wrote:I don’t reciprocate bc we live in an apartment. It’s nothing personal.
Or you take your kid and a friend to the playground….. don’t event need to go to your house.
Not your apartment, not your kid, not your say that matters?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, this is our story and my gripe. 3 years into our school, I've given up.
The "playdates" are class bday parties or after school programs.
It totally dumbfounds me. There are many playdates I've arranged and with no/low reciprocation, like OP.
The girls seems to do better than the boys re playdates, who go sport to sport.
So neighborhood, church, pool, and camp friends are the playdates, not the classmates. And yeah, concur makes public compelling.
Guessing a post COVID thing?
Sounds like there are a lot of sporty boys in your child’s class. Sporty boys have tight schedules. They become close teammates and may have more get togethers on that front, especially if they’re in travel sports and play dates happen in before, after or in between distant games in, for example, Richmond or Annapolis. Also many sporty boys can be hyperaggressive and annoying to host.
Don’t take it personally but if you think you can find a better dynamic elsewhere, worth checking around.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I am definitely not charismatic. More of an introvert. Do I present well? I'm not really sure. I'm slim and dress nicely, not frumpy, but not anything special. I have an interesting job.
When we're at events, like the end of the year program, the other parents will chat with me for like 2 minutes and then cut the conversation short to move on to talk to someone more interesting. I've definitely noticed this at school events. I have tried to get to know them but they definitely don't seem interested in getting to know me. I don't really know what is going on with that.
Anonymous wrote:My child is in first grade in private school, and we have been at this school for two years. I am really bothered by the fact that none of my son's classmates have ever invited him to a playdate. He has 5 super close friends in the class, and we have invited those kids over to our house many times, I've organized playdates and meetups at parks and playgrounds, as well as invited their whole families over for pizza, but not once has any of the other parents invited my child or our family to do anything outside of school--like not even a park meetup. I know these kids really like my son, and the parents are usually happy to meet up for whatever I organize, but there has been zero reciprocation. I also know that these other parents talk a lot with each other (but not with me). I don't really know why we're left out of the loop or not included. Last week I learned that one of my son's best friends invited a few other classmates over to his house but my son was not invited, and this really upset me.
This whole thing really bothers me and it's one reason I'm considering leaving private for public. I want my son to have friendships outside of school and I want him to hang out with his classmates outside of school, but for the past two years, there has been no interest from the other families in doing so. My son has a few other friends from church, etc. but mainly wants to hang out with his school friends on weekends. Is this typical for private school or did we just get stuck with a class of disinterested parents?
Anonymous wrote:Well, this is our story and my gripe. 3 years into our school, I've given up.
The "playdates" are class bday parties or after school programs.
It totally dumbfounds me. There are many playdates I've arranged and with no/low reciprocation, like OP.
The girls seems to do better than the boys re playdates, who go sport to sport.
So neighborhood, church, pool, and camp friends are the playdates, not the classmates. And yeah, concur makes public compelling.
Guessing a post COVID thing?
Anonymous wrote:you’re using living in an apartment as an excuse. It’s part of your life story not an excuse for letting your kids have friends over. Kids don’t care about space or how big your houses is.Anonymous wrote:I don’t reciprocate bc we live in an apartment. It’s nothing personal.
Or you take your kid and a friend to the playground….. don’t event need to go to your house.