Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you just take a break and keep the kids separate for awhile before blowing it all up? They are 6 and by nature and poor social skills. Kids don't get along one month and are best friends the next at this age.
This is not sound advice. Six is plenty old enough to know. Do not put your child with this other child to get re-victimized.
"Re-vitimized"? Good Lord, do you know any 6 year olds?
You must be a mom of a bully.
+1
You must be moms of toddlers. Do you know how many times my kids have come home crying about so-and-so excluding them and not playing with them and then the next week they forget all about it and are best friends? Happens all the time. Or my kids didn't get along with some kids who were too physical, or bossy, and then a few months later all is forgotten and everyone is friends. You people need to chill and quit labelling young children as monsters when they are all still just figuring things out. Maybe OP and the kid aren't meant to be friends, or maybe they will work it out. It's kindergarten, after the summer it can all change.
I think it’s weird the OP seems to think the very over the top sounding physical issues are equivalent to the pretty typical mean girl behavior of exclusion which does happen quite a lot. It’s not great but it’s definitely not on the same level as punching and leaving bruises. Regardless it’s ok to be sad but is this really a big change? Did the girls play together fine before this? It sounds like a big escalation and I guess it would make me curious and slightly worried about the other girl. And I say that as a parent of a DD who has had some behavioral issues we work with multiple professionals on.
The girl was always kind of mean but the physical stuff happened out of the blue last week. It makes me wonder how long this has been going on. Otherwise the usual girl stuff was par of course but I found nothing too alarming.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you just take a break and keep the kids separate for awhile before blowing it all up? They are 6 and by nature and poor social skills. Kids don't get along one month and are best friends the next at this age.
This is not sound advice. Six is plenty old enough to know. Do not put your child with this other child to get re-victimized.
"Re-vitimized"? Good Lord, do you know any 6 year olds?
I know plenty of six year olds and physically harming another child coupled with spreading rumors about them in order to socially isolate them is not run of the mill.
Are you the mom of the bully in question? And yes, it's textbook bullying. The PP who said not to call it that is FOS.
Anonymous wrote:I’m going to have to understand more here before I can decide that OP was right or whether OP is a drama queen herself. Not enough facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you just take a break and keep the kids separate for awhile before blowing it all up? They are 6 and by nature and poor social skills. Kids don't get along one month and are best friends the next at this age.
This is not sound advice. Six is plenty old enough to know. Do not put your child with this other child to get re-victimized.
"Re-vitimized"? Good Lord, do you know any 6 year olds?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you just take a break and keep the kids separate for awhile before blowing it all up? They are 6 and by nature and poor social skills. Kids don't get along one month and are best friends the next at this age.
This is not sound advice. Six is plenty old enough to know. Do not put your child with this other child to get re-victimized.
"Re-vitimized"? Good Lord, do you know any 6 year olds?
You must be a mom of a bully.
+1
You must be moms of toddlers. Do you know how many times my kids have come home crying about so-and-so excluding them and not playing with them and then the next week they forget all about it and are best friends? Happens all the time. Or my kids didn't get along with some kids who were too physical, or bossy, and then a few months later all is forgotten and everyone is friends. You people need to chill and quit labelling young children as monsters when they are all still just figuring things out. Maybe OP and the kid aren't meant to be friends, or maybe they will work it out. It's kindergarten, after the summer it can all change.
+1 We’ll said. The pandemic and some kids being overly isolated has made some of the behaviors worse. Which is to be expected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you just take a break and keep the kids separate for awhile before blowing it all up? They are 6 and by nature and poor social skills. Kids don't get along one month and are best friends the next at this age.
This is not sound advice. Six is plenty old enough to know. Do not put your child with this other child to get re-victimized.
"Re-vitimized"? Good Lord, do you know any 6 year olds?
You must be a mom of a bully.
+1
You must be moms of toddlers. Do you know how many times my kids have come home crying about so-and-so excluding them and not playing with them and then the next week they forget all about it and are best friends? Happens all the time. Or my kids didn't get along with some kids who were too physical, or bossy, and then a few months later all is forgotten and everyone is friends. You people need to chill and quit labelling young children as monsters when they are all still just figuring things out. Maybe OP and the kid aren't meant to be friends, or maybe they will work it out. It's kindergarten, after the summer it can all change.
+1 We’ll said. The pandemic and some kids being overly isolated has made some of the behaviors worse. Which is to be expected.
Anonymous wrote:The physical issue sounds serious, the rest of it sounds like typical bad behavior of 6 year old girls. Tattling to the teacher or exaggerating isn’t spreading rumors. She might have thought your daughter was rude, when she wasn’t, bc they are 6 and have completely warped interpretation of situations. You are talking about 6 yo like they are teenagers lol. But again the physical stuff is bad, and I have seen kids friendships go south in this exact way with a few friends of mine. And no the mother’s friendship never recovered. In the future, if you want to save the friendship, you have to find a way to resolve it without calling the other child a bully and being more collaborative rather than blaming (even if the kid is more at fault, that never goes over well and parents get defensive)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you just take a break and keep the kids separate for awhile before blowing it all up? They are 6 and by nature and poor social skills. Kids don't get along one month and are best friends the next at this age.
This is not sound advice. Six is plenty old enough to know. Do not put your child with this other child to get re-victimized.
"Re-vitimized"? Good Lord, do you know any 6 year olds?
You must be a mom of a bully.
+1
You must be moms of toddlers. Do you know how many times my kids have come home crying about so-and-so excluding them and not playing with them and then the next week they forget all about it and are best friends? Happens all the time. Or my kids didn't get along with some kids who were too physical, or bossy, and then a few months later all is forgotten and everyone is friends. You people need to chill and quit labelling young children as monsters when they are all still just figuring things out. Maybe OP and the kid aren't meant to be friends, or maybe they will work it out. It's kindergarten, after the summer it can all change.
Anonymous wrote:They’re in kindergarten you could have worked through it way to ruin a friendship
Anonymous wrote:For kids that young it’s really better to say her kid was having some behavior issues/acting out rather than bullying. Of course you need to protect your child but calling it bullying in such a young child isn’t fair and you’re right the friendship is t likely to recover.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kindergarten? Did you at least try to give her time to address it with her child before you went all after school special? Bullying? In kindergarten? Good grief, they’re five!
Oh yes I did. It was a girls will be girls we spoke to her there are both sides to the story attitude.