Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have friends that ALWAYS MAKE US WAIT. in 8 years they have never been on time. Even for zoom calls. It is incredibly rude and we just say after waiting....never mind. We have something right after and can't wait. So don't be those people.
Open to suggestions on how to deal. My DD loves their DD & it isn't fair to the kids.
It feels like a power play by the mom
They are making you wait because their kid has to change pants 100 times. (I’m just kidding.)
LOL....Totally. more accurately, probably the mom. I think it is to show how important she is. But I work FT and she is a SAHM. idk.
I’m a SAHM, and I’ve found that when I didn’t live by the clock (didn’t have to be at job by a certain time, children weren’t in school yet), I tended to have poor skills at knowing exactly how long it would take to get us out of the house, and my kids had no concept of a precise routine that didn’t deviate. We’d be late and I’d know what went wrong and I’d take steps to ensure that we weren’t late for that reason again, but a different kid would have a different reason that made us late the next time. My kids just couldn’t “hurry up” when they were little. Telling them to do so was like speaking a foreign language to them. Once they started school and knew there were consequences for being late (beyond mom stressing out and scolding them), they got it. After that, we were rarely late, and if we were, it was by 1-3 minutes. It was never a power play on my part. I was very apologetic and felt terrible when we were late.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have friends that ALWAYS MAKE US WAIT. in 8 years they have never been on time. Even for zoom calls. It is incredibly rude and we just say after waiting....never mind. We have something right after and can't wait. So don't be those people.
Open to suggestions on how to deal. My DD loves their DD & it isn't fair to the kids.
It feels like a power play by the mom
They are making you wait because their kid has to change pants 100 times. (I’m just kidding.)
LOL....Totally. more accurately, probably the mom. I think it is to show how important she is. But I work FT and she is a SAHM. idk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A family just moved in down the street with a daughter the same age (4) as DD.
I met the mom and we traded #s, and I texted her this week to set up a playdate. I suggested meeting at a park near our house but they suggested meeting in their yard. It was hard to land on a time.
We settled on "around 1pm." At 1:10, after DD had changed her pants 100 times, I said, "On our way!" We walked the 60 seconds over to their house. The other girl ignored DD and it was very awkward. Then she went inside after 5 minutes and we were left kind of standing there. The mom did not try to go back in and cajole her out.
She said, oh sorry, she was thrown because you were 10 minutes late and really likes a schedule...We ended up staying talking to the mom for a bit and then left.
Now I feel really weird and bad??!?!? Did we do something wrong? Should I reach out again? In my mind, "around 1" in preschool time is within 15 or so minutes and it's tough to get kids out the door?![]()
Why did you let your kid "change her pants 100 times"? My kid knows that we respect others' time and keep our plans. After one pant change, we'd be out the door.
Because kids are weird? If we are OK with a 4 year old being a stickler for time, then we should be ok with one who needs to change pants.
Maybe your kid is "weird," but my kid may want to change clothes a lot and we are supposed to be out the door to honor plans, I step in and do this thing called "parenting." I would say, "one different pick, and then we are leaving." It's almost as if its me, and not a 4yo, who runs the show.
Some people run their homes like dictatorships and some don't. Different strokes.
I feel like "around 1pm" for a neighbor is totally fluid!! It's not like you were meeting up at a movie or something with a start time! It's a neighborhood playdate!
Anonymous wrote:You tried and found out that mom has no manners, and she isn't' teaching any to her child.
No need to text again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I knew from the moment I read in your post that you agreed to meet “around 1pm” that this wasn’t going to go well. That’s a bizarre way to plan a play date, I think. My daughter would have also had trouble waiting 10 minutes for a friend to come over. That’s an eternity for 4 year olds. I think that was poor planning on the part of the moms.
Also it sounds like you’re blaming the other mom for not making her child come back outside, but you didn’t make your child stop changing clothes before she had gone through 100 outfits because “it’s hard to get out the door with preschoolers”?
It sounds like your family and the neighbor family might be incompatible. But I don’t think the neighbor did anything wrong.
Your 4 year old tracks what time it is, to the point where she would know the kid was 10 minutes late?
Oh come on, the mom made sure kid was outside at 1pm by pumping her up for the play date “we need to put on shoes and get your ball because new friend is coming over!” Kid got excited and then disappointed by the wait and maybe hurt feelings a bit. Normal! No big deal! The moms chatted, they’ll try again later. You guys can’t put this much pressure on a play date especially when it’s right down the street! No harm done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A family just moved in down the street with a daughter the same age (4) as DD.
I met the mom and we traded #s, and I texted her this week to set up a playdate. I suggested meeting at a park near our house but they suggested meeting in their yard. It was hard to land on a time.
We settled on "around 1pm." At 1:10, after DD had changed her pants 100 times, I said, "On our way!" We walked the 60 seconds over to their house. The other girl ignored DD and it was very awkward. Then she went inside after 5 minutes and we were left kind of standing there. The mom did not try to go back in and cajole her out.
She said, oh sorry, she was thrown because you were 10 minutes late and really likes a schedule...We ended up staying talking to the mom for a bit and then left.
Now I feel really weird and bad??!?!? Did we do something wrong? Should I reach out again? In my mind, "around 1" in preschool time is within 15 or so minutes and it's tough to get kids out the door?![]()
Why did you let your kid "change her pants 100 times"? My kid knows that we respect others' time and keep our plans. After one pant change, we'd be out the door.
Because kids are weird? If we are OK with a 4 year old being a stickler for time, then we should be ok with one who needs to change pants.
Maybe your kid is "weird," but my kid may want to change clothes a lot and we are supposed to be out the door to honor plans, I step in and do this thing called "parenting." I would say, "one different pick, and then we are leaving." It's almost as if its me, and not a 4yo, who runs the show.
Some people run their homes like dictatorships and some don't. Different strokes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have friends that ALWAYS MAKE US WAIT. in 8 years they have never been on time. Even for zoom calls. It is incredibly rude and we just say after waiting....never mind. We have something right after and can't wait. So don't be those people.
Open to suggestions on how to deal. My DD loves their DD & it isn't fair to the kids.
It feels like a power play by the mom
We have friends like this and we only get together with them when we have the time for them to be late. If their being late will put us in a bind or be inconvenient we don’t schedule anything with them.
Anonymous wrote:Neighbor is weird, rude, inflexible
Anonymous wrote:We have friends that ALWAYS MAKE US WAIT. in 8 years they have never been on time. Even for zoom calls. It is incredibly rude and we just say after waiting....never mind. We have something right after and can't wait. So don't be those people.
Open to suggestions on how to deal. My DD loves their DD & it isn't fair to the kids.
It feels like a power play by the mom
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have friends that ALWAYS MAKE US WAIT. in 8 years they have never been on time. Even for zoom calls. It is incredibly rude and we just say after waiting....never mind. We have something right after and can't wait. So don't be those people.
Open to suggestions on how to deal. My DD loves their DD & it isn't fair to the kids.
It feels like a power play by the mom
They are making you wait because their kid has to change pants 100 times. (I’m just kidding.)