Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10 girls in the class. My daughter was one of three not invited. Four additional girls from other classes were invited.
The mom and I are friendly. My daughter of course heard about it at school and her feelings were hurt. I think it was rude to leave out just three. What do you think?
You can't have a sleepover with 14 children. Unfortunately sometimes your child is the one left out and sometimes your child is the one have to leave others out. What would I do? Use it as a teaching tool to explain that it doesn't speak about how this child doesn't like your child. Apparently you don't get that message, though.
They invited 11 girls, at that point 3 more is no big deal. Yes, you can have that many and we have a 1000sq foot house. We could make it work, so if you cannot make it work in a house 2-5 times as big, something is wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10 girls in the class. My daughter was one of three not invited. Four additional girls from other classes were invited.
The mom and I are friendly. My daughter of course heard about it at school and her feelings were hurt. I think it was rude to leave out just three. What do you think?
You can't have a sleepover with 14 children. Unfortunately sometimes your child is the one left out and sometimes your child is the one have to leave others out. What would I do? Use it as a teaching tool to explain that it doesn't speak about how this child doesn't like your child. Apparently you don't get that message, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom isn't your friend. If your daughter likes the two other girls, I'd invite them for a sleep over and make it really fun and go over the top making a big fuss.
This is a great idea. Even if you can't do a sleep over invite them over for pizza and a movie.
How is this any better? The sleepover host is honest about who her close friends are and invites only her close friends. In response, an outer layer friend invites kids that she isn't close to over in an effort to compete with the sleepover. That's just plain weird. Now, if you had said that the uninvited girl should plan to do something fun with her friends or family, great. But to use people who are not her friends so that she has something she can brag about on Monday at school is dishonest and, well, using people.
I'm usually pretty laid back about whatever works for people, but inviting the other left out girls over just because they all got left out is pretty cringe worthy. It hurts to be left out, but there are healthier ways to process the disappointment and grow from it.
I agree that going over the top and making a big fuss with all of the other girls who were not invited is a bad idea. However, if there's one of the other girls who was not invited that OP's daughter is interested in hanging out with or getting to know better, doing something low key like watching a movie together could be a good plan.
It does not need to be one of the girls that were not invited... just invite a friend, have playdates, sleepovers, DD needs to cultivate own friends.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom isn't your friend. If your daughter likes the two other girls, I'd invite them for a sleep over and make it really fun and go over the top making a big fuss.
This is a great idea. Even if you can't do a sleep over invite them over for pizza and a movie.
How is this any better? The sleepover host is honest about who her close friends are and invites only her close friends. In response, an outer layer friend invites kids that she isn't close to over in an effort to compete with the sleepover. That's just plain weird. Now, if you had said that the uninvited girl should plan to do something fun with her friends or family, great. But to use people who are not her friends so that she has something she can brag about on Monday at school is dishonest and, well, using people.
I'm usually pretty laid back about whatever works for people, but inviting the other left out girls over just because they all got left out is pretty cringe worthy. It hurts to be left out, but there are healthier ways to process the disappointment and grow from it.
Anonymous wrote:10 girls in the class. My daughter was one of three not invited. Four additional girls from other classes were invited.
The mom and I are friendly. My daughter of course heard about it at school and her feelings were hurt. I think it was rude to leave out just three. What do you think?
Anonymous wrote:Mom isn't your friend. If your daughter likes the two other girls, I'd invite them for a sleep over and make it really fun and go over the top making a big fuss.
This is a great idea. Even if you can't do a sleep over invite them over for pizza and a movie.
How is this any better? The sleepover host is honest about who her close friends are and invites only her close friends. In response, an outer layer friend invites kids that she isn't close to over in an effort to compete with the sleepover. That's just plain weird. Now, if you had said that the uninvited girl should plan to do something fun with her friends or family, great. But to use people who are not her friends so that she has something she can brag about on Monday at school is dishonest and, well, using people.
I'm usually pretty laid back about whatever works for people, but inviting the other left out girls over just because they all got left out is pretty cringe worthy. It hurts to be left out, but there are healthier ways to process the disappointment and grow from it.
I agree that going over the top and making a big fuss with all of the other girls who were not invited is a bad idea. However, if there's one of the other girls who was not invited that OP's daughter is interested in hanging out with or getting to know better, doing something low key like watching a movie together could be a good plan.
Mom isn't your friend. If your daughter likes the two other girls, I'd invite them for a sleep over and make it really fun and go over the top making a big fuss.
This is a great idea. Even if you can't do a sleep over invite them over for pizza and a movie.
How is this any better? The sleepover host is honest about who her close friends are and invites only her close friends. In response, an outer layer friend invites kids that she isn't close to over in an effort to compete with the sleepover. That's just plain weird. Now, if you had said that the uninvited girl should plan to do something fun with her friends or family, great. But to use people who are not her friends so that she has something she can brag about on Monday at school is dishonest and, well, using people.
I'm usually pretty laid back about whatever works for people, but inviting the other left out girls over just because they all got left out is pretty cringe worthy. It hurts to be left out, but there are healthier ways to process the disappointment and grow from it.
Anonymous wrote:Sleepovers to me are totally different than birthday parties. Those you should probably stick to the class rules and not exclude a couple kids. But a sleepover is like an extended play date, these kids are around eachother in someone else's home for 12+ hours. In that situation it really only usually involves the close friends, not everyone in class. I would tell mg daughter that these friends had a sleepover and one day she can have one too but I would not be sad she wasn't invited or encourage any self pity over it. She's at the age you need to be guiding her toward forming her own friend group as the days of "everyone's included" are quickly coming to an end.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom isn't your friend. If your daughter likes the two other girls, I'd invite them for a sleep over and make it really fun and go over the top making a big fuss.
This is a great idea. Even if you can't do a sleep over invite them over for pizza and a movie.
How is this any better? The sleepover host is honest about who her close friends are and invites only her close friends. In response, an outer layer friend invites kids that she isn't close to over in an effort to compete with the sleepover. That's just plain weird. Now, if you had said that the uninvited girl should plan to do something fun with her friends or family, great. But to use people who are not her friends so that she has something she can brag about on Monday at school is dishonest and, well, using people.
Anonymous wrote:By 8 they should realize that they aren't close friends with everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of the responses in this thread explain how we end up with entitled adults. Nobody HAS to invite someone to their party/house. Sometimes your feelings get hurt. Sometimes you arent invited. You deal with it.
You're missing the point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mom isn't your friend. If your daughter likes the two other girls, I'd invite them for a sleep over and make it really fun and go over the top making a big fuss.
This is a great idea. Even if you can't do a sleep over invite them over for pizza and a movie.
Anonymous wrote:10 girls in the class. My daughter was one of three not invited. Four additional girls from other classes were invited.
The mom and I are friendly. My daughter of course heard about it at school and her feelings were hurt. I think it was rude to leave out just three. What do you think?