Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think your DD needs a one liner she’s comfortable with that she can just repeat no matter what this girl says. “Always looking to improve, thanks for the input” or something like that. This technique is very helpful in difficult conversations. You have one immovable position. Just repeat it no matter what crazy comes at u.
OP here. I like this. I don’t know if DD will do it, but I’ll suggest it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WHY won't OP come back and tell us how old this kid is?
OP here. They are 13/14. My DD is a starter and I think this girl (who doesn’t start) wants my DD’s position. The girl is subbed in for my daughter late in games and isn’t that good. My DD is very very sensitive and yes we are working on it and have been. In a battle of words with this other girl, DD would surely lose.
My question was more how do I convince DD this girl’s opinion is not important and DD should not care what she thinks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think your DD needs a one liner she’s comfortable with that she can just repeat no matter what this girl says. “Always looking to improve, thanks for the input” or something like that. This technique is very helpful in difficult conversations. You have one immovable position. Just repeat it no matter what crazy comes at u.
OP here. I like this. I don’t know if DD will do it, but I’ll suggest it.
Anonymous wrote:I think your DD needs a one liner she’s comfortable with that she can just repeat no matter what this girl says. “Always looking to improve, thanks for the input” or something like that. This technique is very helpful in difficult conversations. You have one immovable position. Just repeat it no matter what crazy comes at u.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is on a sports team. OP, you’re getting some very bad advice in here. Tread carefully. I’d take it to sports forum. You’re getting a lot of young parents or parents of unathletic kids.
Agreed. Most of these comments sound like they are coming fro parents of 5 year olds on rec leagues and posters who have never played a sport. None of the comments were mean or bullying. People clearly don't even know what those words mean anymore.
+1
At our club, they really encourage the girls to tell each other where they need to be and speak to each other in the field, but some girls just can’t handle it and think they’re being targeted/being targeted of bullying. How Are these kids going to thrive in the rail world? If someone keeps telling your kid they’re in the wrong spot/position, Maybe they need to stop having a victim mentality and figure out where they should actually be.
Anonymous wrote:WHY won't OP come back and tell us how old this kid is?