Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teach her to be kind
+1
Does being reciprocal mean align with your family's values?
I would invite her, because those are MY values, which are not dependent on others' behaviors. I would also not hesitate to correct her misbehavior if I see it.
My values are kindness, unless it means putting my child in danger or in a situation that will be hurtful to her. So, I don’t care if another kid feels bad for being left out after doing mean things. I wouldn’t make my daughter sacrifice her comfort and safety and happiness on her day for that. I would also explain To my daughter that if she may not be invited to that girls party which it sounds like she wouldn’t mind.
Actions have consequences. And that girl may need to learn the hard way
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Throwing someone’s eraser away is unkind but it does not make her a bully. People WAY overuse that word.
It’s hilarious what “unkind” has to stretch to mean. That 11 year old is an ahole and not likely to change. “Sweet Larla went through a phase where she unkindly trashed others’s belongings and made pointed nasty comments.”
Because she threw someone’s eraser away? You cannot possibly be serious. Kids can be jerks- no question about that- but if I wrote off every friend/classmate of my kids’ who has done something like this over the years….I don’t think there would be many left.
DP. Maybe the girl will change. But as long as she's being a jerk and trashing erasers, she can't come to the party. If/when she turns over a new leaf, the invites will start rolling in. It's not anyone's job to keep giving her chance after chance waiting for that point in time. Friend groups are constantly evolving, everyone gets that.
Actually, I do believe this is the adult’s role in this. When they are only inviting a small group to dinner and a movie when they get older, then by all means exclude her. Until then, I will act according to my moral compass, but I do realize that not everyone’s is set to North.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The second your exclude her and ONLY her, your daughter has become just as mean as she is. Do with that info what you will.
It is not mean to protect yourself from a bully. No one is saying these girls will come to school Monday with matching shirts or bracelets to flaunt it.
Imagine there is a group of women in your neighborhood who get together regularly and one woman routinely insults other women’s home decor, asks about their weight, points out when people’s hair is overdue for a color appointment, sneers at the food served, etc. When it is your turn to host, do you invite her? I would not.
I would because guess what, they WON’T COME! They don’t want to go to the party of the girl they don’t like but when you invite her and refuse to stoop to her mean level, you are being aligned with your values. She’s never showing up. You invite her anyway because then you are always the bigger person, the blameless one. Ask me how I know.
Who cares about blamelessness in this instance? Are you Amish, in fear of a shunning by the elders? So odd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Throwing someone’s eraser away is unkind but it does not make her a bully. People WAY overuse that word.
It’s hilarious what “unkind” has to stretch to mean. That 11 year old is an ahole and not likely to change. “Sweet Larla went through a phase where she unkindly trashed others’s belongings and made pointed nasty comments.”
Because she threw someone’s eraser away? You cannot possibly be serious. Kids can be jerks- no question about that- but if I wrote off every friend/classmate of my kids’ who has done something like this over the years….I don’t think there would be many left.
DP. Maybe the girl will change. But as long as she's being a jerk and trashing erasers, she can't come to the party. If/when she turns over a new leaf, the invites will start rolling in. It's not anyone's job to keep giving her chance after chance waiting for that point in time. Friend groups are constantly evolving, everyone gets that.
Anonymous wrote:I had a bully at this age, and if my mother had forced me to invite her to my birthday, I would simply have declined having a party at all. Inviting this cruel child into my house would simply have given her more fodder to torment me with. People have gone nuts in the name of inclusion. This isn’t fair to your child, OP. Do not invite her.
Anonymous wrote:Pointless story incoming….
My older DD (now a freshman in HS) had a girl like this in her class in elementary. Same exact story- always making snarky remarks and criticizing the other girls- often about appearance. Didn’t seem to be target at anyone in particular- just a sour, difficult girl.
This continued into MS (large suburban public but their cohort from elementary was together more due to a language immersion track). All of the other girls tolerated this girl at school, who kind of kept hanging around (probably bc she had no other friends). Some learned to snap back at the girl’s rude comments (as if you are one to talk, Larla! etc) They certainly didn’t hang out with her outside of school but didn’t deliberately leave her out either (at MS age everyone is not always included in everything).
Anyway- DD has said the girl is very nice now in HS. I’ve noticed the girl has even been included in some mutual group outings etc. and seems to have some friends now.
I think the girl was just insecure and having a rough time earlier….In hindsight I’m glad no one ever went nuclear and did anything deliberately nasty to the girl (like exclude her and only her from an elementary school party)- why sink to such a level? Not worth it and will seem very silly a few years from now.
I might feel differently if the girl was doing something truly truly horrid- but at this point it is snarky comments and throwing someone’s eraser away. Teach your DD to do the right thing. They don’t have to be friends but to exclude only one girl isn’t right, and teaches a poor lesson.
Anonymous wrote:Throwing someone’s eraser away is unkind but it does not make her a bully. People WAY overuse that word.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The second your exclude her and ONLY her, your daughter has become just as mean as she is. Do with that info what you will.
It is not mean to protect yourself from a bully. No one is saying these girls will come to school Monday with matching shirts or bracelets to flaunt it.
Imagine there is a group of women in your neighborhood who get together regularly and one woman routinely insults other women’s home decor, asks about their weight, points out when people’s hair is overdue for a color appointment, sneers at the food served, etc. When it is your turn to host, do you invite her? I would not.
I would because guess what, they WON’T COME! They don’t want to go to the party of the girl they don’t like but when you invite her and refuse to stoop to her mean level, you are being aligned with your values. She’s never showing up. You invite her anyway because then you are always the bigger person, the blameless one. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teach her to be kind
+1
Does being reciprocal mean align with your family's values?
I would invite her, because those are MY values, which are not dependent on others' behaviors. I would also not hesitate to correct her misbehavior if I see it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Throwing someone’s eraser away is unkind but it does not make her a bully. People WAY overuse that word.
It’s hilarious what “unkind” has to stretch to mean. That 11 year old is an ahole and not likely to change. “Sweet Larla went through a phase where she unkindly trashed others’s belongings and made pointed nasty comments.”
Because she threw someone’s eraser away? You cannot possibly be serious. Kids can be jerks- no question about that- but if I wrote off every friend/classmate of my kids’ who has done something like this over the years….I don’t think there would be many left.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Throwing someone’s eraser away is unkind but it does not make her a bully. People WAY overuse that word.
It’s hilarious what “unkind” has to stretch to mean. That 11 year old is an ahole and not likely to change. “Sweet Larla went through a phase where she unkindly trashed others’s belongings and made pointed nasty comments.”
Because she threw someone’s eraser away? You cannot possibly be serious. Kids can be jerks- no question about that- but if I wrote off every friend/classmate of my kids’ who has done something like this over the years….I don’t think there would be many left.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Throwing someone’s eraser away is unkind but it does not make her a bully. People WAY overuse that word.
It’s hilarious what “unkind” has to stretch to mean. That 11 year old is an ahole and not likely to change. “Sweet Larla went through a phase where she unkindly trashed others’s belongings and made pointed nasty comments.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The second your exclude her and ONLY her, your daughter has become just as mean as she is. Do with that info what you will.
It is not mean to protect yourself from a bully. No one is saying these girls will come to school Monday with matching shirts or bracelets to flaunt it.
Imagine there is a group of women in your neighborhood who get together regularly and one woman routinely insults other women’s home decor, asks about their weight, points out when people’s hair is overdue for a color appointment, sneers at the food served, etc. When it is your turn to host, do you invite her? I would not.
I would because guess what, they WON’T COME! They don’t want to go to the party of the girl they don’t like but when you invite her and refuse to stoop to her mean level, you are being aligned with your values. She’s never showing up. You invite her anyway because then you are always the bigger person, the blameless one. Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:Throwing someone’s eraser away is unkind but it does not make her a bully. People WAY overuse that word.