Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also. I was not looking for sympathy or support as I didn’t need.
I think it was fine. Doubly so if the other mom already brought her child over to visit.
I would respond like this to my own sister. A couple of weeks ago her 5 year old was sick. We talked about it on the phone two days in a row and she was on the mend.
A few days later, I called my sister to see if we could stop over to visit, and she said she wanted her daughter to rest a little. I just sent a thumbs up emoji.
You are an idiot. This level of communication did not happen between OP and her friend.
Jesus, I can’t with you white people who try to justify all sorts of low-EQ behavior.
Anonymous wrote:OP. Yes, friend’s parents are white and wealthy. I am not a drama or exhausting person at all IRL, as other posters have suggested. My DC missed school for a week. Friend 1 came over to see my DC during that week, and invitation for sleepover happened the following weekend. Relationship with parents is unchanged and friendly. I am not going to discuss the other incident.
I wanted to get a sense for what people think. It seems about half of you think parent behavior was fine.
Anonymous wrote:OP. Yes, friend’s parents are white and wealthy. I am not a drama or exhausting person at all IRL, as other posters have suggested. My DC missed school for a week. Friend 1 came over to see my DC during that week, and invitation for sleepover happened the following weekend. Relationship with parents is unchanged and friendly. I am not going to discuss the other incident.
I wanted to get a sense for what people think. It seems about half of you think parent behavior was fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could friend #1 have told his parents already about the car accident and told them your son is physically OK? They may not have wanted to make a big deal out of it if they already heard he’s uninjured. I can see them potentially not wanting to be embarrassingly over effusive.
OP here. Parent of friend 1 typically reads and replies to messages (all kids-related) promptly. I doubt they didn’t read. And my child did get injured, although they recovered, and has a scar to this day. Anyway this behavior shows lack of respect and consideration for sure towards me and I think my son too. If somebody they value more had written the some message they would have not replied with a like. They would have probably taken the initiative to ask about my child’s health when they heard about the accident from somebody else, as it happened with other parents.
Anyway I really don’t care about people like this. It’s just makes me sad to raise my kids in this kind of village with such cut-throat people. And I have not told you about the incident related to friend 2, which is even worse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also. I was not looking for sympathy or support as I didn’t need.
I think it was fine. Doubly so if the other mom already brought her child over to visit.
I would respond like this to my own sister. A couple of weeks ago her 5 year old was sick. We talked about it on the phone two days in a row and she was on the mend.
A few days later, I called my sister to see if we could stop over to visit, and she said she wanted her daughter to rest a little. I just sent a thumbs up emoji.
Anonymous wrote:OP. Yes, friend’s parents are white and wealthy. I am not a drama or exhausting person at all IRL, as other posters have suggested. My DC missed school for a week. Friend 1 came over to see my DC during that week, and invitation for sleepover happened the following weekend. Relationship with parents is unchanged and friendly. I am not going to discuss the other incident.
I wanted to get a sense for what people think. It seems about half of you think parent behavior was fine.
Anonymous wrote:Also. I was not looking for sympathy or support as I didn’t need.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This seems like an odd way to tell someone who is fairly close to your child that he was in a car accident. What if they hadn’t invited him over that weekend? Were you never going to tell them?
If someone here decided that their relationship with your child wasn’t that close, I think it was you. They were just following your lead.
NP but do you announce news to your entire social circle at once? I mean if it’s urgent or you’re looking for support, sure. But if not, why?
Anonymous wrote:This seems like an odd way to tell someone who is fairly close to your child that he was in a car accident. What if they hadn’t invited him over that weekend? Were you never going to tell them?
If someone here decided that their relationship with your child wasn’t that close, I think it was you. They were just following your lead.