Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
As an adult child of a very controlling mother who made socializing near impossible, your post makes me sad. FWIW, once I left home, I never looked back. Spoke to my mother maybe every few months, told her nearly nothing about my life, because she always disapproved of any choice I made. Be careful how you control your kids.
It’s not controlling to say no to sleepovers. Your issues with your mother go way deeper than sleepovers.
OP, it’s fine to say no, anytime. Sleepovers are not essential to a heathy social life.
Of its controlling. Wtf?
And I disagree they aren’t essential. They’re common in the US and not only a social thing, but a way to cut the apron strings a bit.
You all are insane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
As an adult child of a very controlling mother who made socializing near impossible, your post makes me sad. FWIW, once I left home, I never looked back. Spoke to my mother maybe every few months, told her nearly nothing about my life, because she always disapproved of any choice I made. Be careful how you control your kids.
It’s not controlling to say no to sleepovers. Your issues with your mother go way deeper than sleepovers.
OP, it’s fine to say no, anytime. Sleepovers are not essential to a heathy social life.
Anonymous wrote:Families do prefer allowing sleepovers at single moms home. For sure it makes us feel safer especially if there are no brothers there too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
As an adult child of a very controlling mother who made socializing near impossible, your post makes me sad. FWIW, once I left home, I never looked back. Spoke to my mother maybe every few months, told her nearly nothing about my life, because she always disapproved of any choice I made. Be careful how you control your kids.
It’s not controlling to say no to sleepovers. Your issues with your mother go way deeper than sleepovers.
OP, it’s fine to say no, anytime. Sleepovers are not essential to a heathy social life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP--I hate hosting sleepovers, even if its just one other child. I want to relax on weekend mornings, not have to care for extra kids. I would tell her they have to rotate. She gets one a month but it has to be planned in advance. I hate it when we are hanging at the pool in the evening and my kid asks if they can have a sleepover that night in front of the other kid(s). If I am somewhat prepared for it, it's more likely to happen.
I also much prefer to drop friends late at night. They hang out, watch a movie, have some snacks and I would be more than glad to drive their friends home at 10/11pm.
Tell your kids that they shouldn't do that! The one time my kids did that I told them no and also told them it was an automatic no if they ever did it again.
+1 My kid learned the hard way not to use this tactic with me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Four girls. One sleepover a week. They each rotate. One sleepover per month at your house.
That’s easy for me to say but the parents have to be on board too and apparently they aren’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
As an adult child of a very controlling mother who made socializing near impossible, your post makes me sad. FWIW, once I left home, I never looked back. Spoke to my mother maybe every few months, told her nearly nothing about my life, because she always disapproved of any choice I made. Be careful how you control your kids.
It’s not controlling to say no to sleepovers. Your issues with your mother go way deeper than sleepovers.
OP, it’s fine to say no, anytime. Sleepovers are not essential to a heathy social life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
As an adult child of a very controlling mother who made socializing near impossible, your post makes me sad. FWIW, once I left home, I never looked back. Spoke to my mother maybe every few months, told her nearly nothing about my life, because she always disapproved of any choice I made. Be careful how you control your kids.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
As an adult child of a very controlling mother who made socializing near impossible, your post makes me sad. FWIW, once I left home, I never looked back. Spoke to my mother maybe every few months, told her nearly nothing about my life, because she always disapproved of any choice I made. Be careful how you control your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
As an adult child of a very controlling mother who made socializing near impossible, your post makes me sad. FWIW, once I left home, I never looked back. Spoke to my mother maybe every few months, told her nearly nothing about my life, because she always disapproved of any choice I made. Be careful how you control your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Your DD is very lucky. At our house, there are zero sleepovers. We do not host them ever. Our DC are not allowed to attend them elsewhere. When they go away to college, then they can choose. Not on my watch.
Anonymous wrote:But my tween acts like she’s aggrieved if we say no to them. She has three friends, all in our neighborhood, and they want to have sleepovers constantly. I’m a single mom and for me, they are very overstimulating. I feel like I have to be “on” and can’t relax like normal. It’s also stressful thinking of providing food and snacks that four girls will all like, so no one goes hungry on my watch. I can’t explain it, it’s just high stress. She had a sleepover two weeks ago and one last week, and I said no to one this week and she claims I’m ruining her social life. I just can’t do this every week, and there are still nearly two months of summer left. It makes me not even want to host kids for just the day! How can I help her understand that it’s not that I don’t want her socializing, but that it’s a lot of responsibility for ME, and I need a break.