Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At age 17, OP, I would be concerned about the safety of my daughter.
Someone--mom, frenemy, or foe went through the trouble to send you an anonymous email. That is a red flag to me, regardless of how you view your daughter's behavior.
What does your spouse think?
I would never trust an anonymous email about my kid, especially one that sounds as creepy and stalker-like as that. My only debate would be whether to go to the police or not.
Lol there is nothing criminal about that email.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At age 17, OP, I would be concerned about the safety of my daughter.
Someone--mom, frenemy, or foe went through the trouble to send you an anonymous email. That is a red flag to me, regardless of how you view your daughter's behavior.
What does your spouse think?
I would never trust an anonymous email about my kid, especially one that sounds as creepy and stalker-like as that. My only debate would be whether to go to the police or not.
Anonymous wrote:When DD was 14, in 8th grade & about to change schools for HS, I called her two main bullies’ moms and told them what their daughters were doing. No regrets.
Anonymous wrote:At age 17, OP, I would be concerned about the safety of my daughter.
Someone--mom, frenemy, or foe went through the trouble to send you an anonymous email. That is a red flag to me, regardless of how you view your daughter's behavior.
What does your spouse think?
Anonymous wrote:Omg! She’s 17. Ignore FFS.
Thank god she will be in college soon and not have to deal with whoever this crazy B is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody is the mean girl. It's probably true.
My general impression from what my kids tell me is the "popular" girls in middle school (assuming it's this age group) are in fact pretty mean and awful. There is a lot of drama and talking about others and pushing kids out of the group and changing alliances. And a lot of paranoia about losing status.
Anonymous wrote:Wow.
If I got this kind of an email, I would really err on the side of thinking it's true. Maybe that's wrong, but I would. What kid is going to go to those lengths to reach out to you with no good reason? How does a kid that age even get your email? They don't operate in the world of emails.
I would just be very transparent with my daughter and let her read it. And process it together and see what she says. Not in a...you're in trouble way...but let's talk way. If it's real, she should know and if someone would go to these lengths to send something untrue about her, she should also know and might have an idea who it is and then would interact with that person differently.
Anonymous wrote:When DD was 14, in 8th grade & about to change schools for HS, I called her two main bullies’ moms and told them what their daughters were doing. No regrets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe the sender is the mean girl trying to stir up drama? I would probably ask vague social dynamics questions of my kid and if it seems like something is off, probably share the anonymous email with the school counselor. Nothing is truly anonymous. If a kid is sending that kind of message, then the school has a problem they need to address.
Let's walk this through. I'm a teenage mean girl. I want to pick on my "victim" who is popular. My go to move is I anonymously email her parents? That's not very gratifying at all. What does that accomplish exactly?
She hopes her mom grounds her or at least accuse her.
Girls are crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Your daughter does not need to be friends with everyone
She should be kind to everyone unless they are rude to her then she may ignore that person
There will always be fake stories in the world. She needs to learn to be self confident in herself to allow fake stories to exist and not care.