Anonymous wrote:To a 14 year old, yes, this is embarrassing. You could have declined differently.
When I was that age, my mother told a friends mother that we couldn’t afford for me to go to a camp. While true, my mother could have said something else was the reason. The other mother told her daughter who then told me. It was a terrible feeling as a 14 year old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To a 14 year old, yes, this is embarrassing. You could have declined differently.
When I was that age, my mother told a friends mother that we couldn’t afford for me to go to a camp. While true, my mother could have said something else was the reason. The other mother told her daughter who then told me. It was a terrible feeling as a 14 year old.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’re fine.
Also 14 year olds are weirdos who literally don’t want the other kids to even know they have parents, so she’ll be hissing at you about how embarrassing you are for a year or two more. Was discussing this with my husband today as our youngest is 14 and in this phase. His 16 year old brother is finally out of it.
+1 on this. I said hello and had a brief chat with a former neighbor girl that i used to see daily, and my 13-year old said it was SO WEIRD and EMBARASSING that I was speaking to them.
I think what you did was not only fine, it was totally appropriate. If my kids expected me to just drop $100 because they were bored, I'd tell them to think again. And we have plenty of money. If they wanted to go for ice cream and you said "we can't afford that" -- that might be embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell my children that they should not spring anything on me in front of their friends because they may not like my unplanned out answer. It took a few reminders but we got there. My kid would have excused herself and come to see me privately.
+1
My kid routinely springs things on me in front of her friends. It’s almost as if she thinks asking in front of them will help her cause? The requests are outrageous, sometimes illegal, and often require sacrifice in my part. I say no. Her friends all think we are super mean.
Anonymous wrote:To a 14 year old, yes, this is embarrassing. You could have declined differently.
When I was that age, my mother told a friends mother that we couldn’t afford for me to go to a camp. While true, my mother could have said something else was the reason. The other mother told her daughter who then told me. It was a terrible feeling as a 14 year old.
Anonymous wrote:DD had a friend over today. The plan was they’d hang out, then the friend would join us for dinner and dessert. Well, not long after they got home they decided they were bored and wanted to go to an activity. I considered it, looked up prices and was couldn’t believe my eyes. Without thinking I blurted out to DD, “I don’t think we are going to do that. It’s really expensive!” I blurted out some other ideas and we landed on something else. DD pulled me aside and told me it was “humiliating” that I mentioned the price because now her friend probably thinks we are poor. It was just that I wasn’t about to pay $100 for an unplanned activity after some recent expenses (for DD.)
Did I make the huge faux pas that DD perceives or am I fine?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I tell my children that they should not spring anything on me in front of their friends because they may not like my unplanned out answer. It took a few reminders but we got there. My kid would have excused herself and come to see me privately.
+1
My kid routinely springs things on me in front of her friends. It’s almost as if she thinks asking in front of them will help her cause? The requests are outrageous, sometimes illegal, and often require sacrifice in my part. I say no. Her friends all think we are super mean.
Anonymous wrote:You’re fine.
Also 14 year olds are weirdos who literally don’t want the other kids to even know they have parents, so she’ll be hissing at you about how embarrassing you are for a year or two more. Was discussing this with my husband today as our youngest is 14 and in this phase. His 16 year old brother is finally out of it.
Anonymous wrote:Ignore PP.
Everything is fine. You behaved like a normal human being. Don't give this another thought.
Anonymous wrote:I tell my children that they should not spring anything on me in front of their friends because they may not like my unplanned out answer. It took a few reminders but we got there. My kid would have excused herself and come to see me privately.
Anonymous wrote:What you said was not at all inappropriate in any sense OTHER than tween girl dynamics.
In that sense, and in her mind, I can see how it was humiliating. You weren't wrong. But her feelings are valid.
It wasn't necessary to say you weren't doing it because of the expense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Make her use her allowance money, once she starts paying for things herself she’ll have an opportunity to learn how to budget and build money skills
Ding,ding,ding!!