Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why posters are missing the point that OP is saying her daughter feels slighted for never being invited over to friends house.
Frankly, I wonder if the bff hasn't already confided in daughter, but told the daughter you can't tell anyone, and she has honored that.
OP, is your daughter upset, or is it just you who are tired of always hosting. And you seem to do a lot of work for it. That is great, except for the fact that you resent it. Let the girls figure out what to do on their own.
Yes, she often asks why can’t I go to their house or sleep over there? I feel she is missing out on learning how to be a gracious guest, how to interact with others in their home, and manage herself without one of her parents for a night. These are milestones IMO she should get to experience as well.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure why posters are missing the point that OP is saying her daughter feels slighted for never being invited over to friends house.
Frankly, I wonder if the bff hasn't already confided in daughter, but told the daughter you can't tell anyone, and she has honored that.
OP, is your daughter upset, or is it just you who are tired of always hosting. And you seem to do a lot of work for it. That is great, except for the fact that you resent it. Let the girls figure out what to do on their own.
Yes, she often asks why can’t I go to their house or sleep over there? I feel she is missing out on learning how to be a gracious guest, how to interact with others in their home, and manage herself without one of her parents for a night. These are milestones IMO she should get to experience as well.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:OP depending on type and stage of cancer and the treatment that got her into remission, your child’s bestie’s mom might never regain her precancer health and energy levels, she remains immune compromised within a few years of having cancer and treatment and she is absolutely right to limit the kid traffic in her home because kids of all ages are Petri dishes of communicable disease.
And yes, if she has diminished energy and needs to manage her stress, she should be focusing her all on her own family and not on hosting playdates.
And her daughter should not be blamed nor should you be judging her mother or making snark comments to your kid.
Be grateful you’ve not had cancer thus far in your life. Show some grace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd tell my kid the real reason.
"Ella's mom is lazy. That's why she never lets Ella have friends over." Because that's the real reason.
Anonymous wrote:For those of you acting like OP is wrong for not wanting some reciprocation, do you really invite kids places with yours over and over again and never get resentful or wonder why? You just keep doing it for the joy it brings?
I have an only ( tween) and she likes doing things with friends. So I invite. But I do think it would be the right thing to do for the other parent to reciprocate occasionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You decide how much you are willing to host. You do that. You tell your daughter that not everyone is the same and some families just do not have the energy to host.
How is that fair? Hosting can be as simple as picking up my child and having her Accompany them to Chick-fil-A dinner one night. Or drop them off at a movie and then pick them up and bring my child home. That is not exerting energy “hosting” - that’s just being polite to reciprocate.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess the question is, why ARE you doing so much?
Another question is: why does your daughter only have one friend?
Obviously, she has more than just this friend, but this is her best friend and the one that she wants to spend the most time with in her limited time off from school and activities. And she sees her school friends plenty and her sports friends plenty. She does not go to the same school as her best friend, and they do not have any sports together, so when she has downtime this is the friend she wants to be with the most. How is that not understandable? I’m not gonna constantly suggest she do things with another friend that she doesn’t want to be with as much as her Bestie.
-OP
So you either support her in her friendship with “Bestie” (blech), or you don’t. Which is it?
You’re acting like it’s really taxing or expensive to invite a kid over to play and set one more place at the table for spaghetti night or whatever. It’s not. You’re just a bean-counter. You are weird. If you don’t want to do complicated or expensive things, don’t. But don’t act put upon if a couple of tweens want to hang out at home and maybe go wild and make a batch of Rice Krispie treats. You are really weird and dramatic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people never fully bounce back after cancer and chemo even though they're in remission. Try to give her some grace and keep inviting the kid.
I agree with this, and it’s how you could explain things to your daughter. She’s old enough, this it too long to keep a secret from her, and your daughter is the one to whom you owe loyalty, honesty, and respect.
I wouldn't mention the cancer if you can avoid it. You can just say everyone has different every levels and tolerance for being "on" to host, even the most people guests
Your daughter's friend can decide if she wants to tell your daughter. The friend may be so thankful to have one friend in her life who doesn't know and act weird around her and her mom. It puts you in a tough place, but better you to be in that place than your daughter feeling like she needs to beat the burden of knowing something she can't talk about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess the question is, why ARE you doing so much?
Another question is: why does your daughter only have one friend?
Obviously, she has more than just this friend, but this is her best friend and the one that she wants to spend the most time with in her limited time off from school and activities. And she sees her school friends plenty and her sports friends plenty. She does not go to the same school as her best friend, and they do not have any sports together, so when she has downtime this is the friend she wants to be with the most. How is that not understandable? I’m not gonna constantly suggest she do things with another friend that she doesn’t want to be with as much as her Bestie.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people never fully bounce back after cancer and chemo even though they're in remission. Try to give her some grace and keep inviting the kid.
I agree with this, and it’s how you could explain things to your daughter. She’s old enough, this it too long to keep a secret from her, and your daughter is the one to whom you owe loyalty, honesty, and respect.
Anonymous wrote:You decide how much you are willing to host. You do that. You tell your daughter that not everyone is the same and some families just do not have the energy to host.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess the question is, why ARE you doing so much?
Another question is: why does your daughter only have one friend?
Obviously, she has more than just this friend, but this is her best friend and the one that she wants to spend the most time with in her limited time off from school and activities. And she sees her school friends plenty and her sports friends plenty. She does not go to the same school as her best friend, and they do not have any sports together, so when she has downtime this is the friend she wants to be with the most. How is that not understandable? I’m not gonna constantly suggest she do things with another friend that she doesn’t want to be with as much as her Bestie.
-OP