Anonymous wrote:The only circumstances IMO under which this is acceptable is if the kid is *currently* out of control and the playdate would be a disaster. In that case, you're protecting everyone. But just as a punishment? No.
Anonymous wrote:I’d just like to say that my four year old of very average intelligence would 1000% connect something he did wrong today with a consequence the next day. Especially something big. Fortunately he is an actual angel and hardly gets in trouble, so I don’t need to do this. But I would if I had too. Give your kids more credit.
Anonymous wrote:I’m going to see Larlo today.
No, you aren’t. Remember yesterday when you kept _______ and I told you to stop. But you didn’t. Now you can’t see Larlo.
Lightbulb moment even for a four year old.
Anonymous wrote:I think your friend did the right thing. She is trying to teach her child a lesson, please support her in that mission. My kids are in HS now, and I did the same thing a few times when they were young.
Play dates are not a right, they are a privilege. They are also lever parents can use to teach proper behavior.
She gave you at least 24-hours notice too, which shows she was trying to minimize the damage on your end and give you room to make other arrangements. I don't understand why you are not more supportive of this friend.
Anonymous wrote:Ditch this friend and kid. It's not worth the drama and hassle. It will happen again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your friend actually did the right thing. I had a hard time disciplining our kids because there was always an activity coming up and I didn't want to disappoint the other kid by cancelling. In hindsight, it would have worked much better for my kids to experience an immediate consequence of not getting to do something they really wanted to do.
No, she didn’t. She flaked out on parenting.
Hard disagree. You "flake" when you plan to meet up for drinks and at the last minute say you can't do it. She's parenting her kids the best way she can. Yes, it stinks for OP, but I bet it stinks as much, if not more, for the other mom. OP can still take her kids to the destination and even make it a teachable moment. "I'm sorry, Larla, but Larlo isn't able to come to the playdate because he made bad choices" or however you want to word it. It would help if OP gave us ages and other details, but I get it if she doesn't want to out the other mom.
Anonymous wrote:We've been burned enough times that I don't tell my kid about a playdate until right before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A four year old isn’t going to connect something that’s going to happen tomorrow with whatever she’s doing today. This was a punishment so the mom could feel better, it teaches the kid nothing.
Yup