Anonymous wrote:You are right that your daughter does not and should not have to hang out with this girl just because you are friends with her mom. However, it sounds like she is old enough to know how to decline in a polite and kind way vs. how she did. I would meet with the mom once, explain that you are disappointed with how your daughter handled it, but that the kids can't be forced to be friends, just polite and kind. I doubt it will fix the friendship with her mom, but it is still worth doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, put yourself in this mom’s shoes. Say it’s your daughter who is suddenly being rudely excluded by someone she’s been close friends with for 8 years, and she’s feeling upset / betrayed / hurt. Of course it’s going to bleed over….I’m not saying they need to be besties, but I also would not have interest in remaining close with a mom who taught her daughter that was an acceptable way to treat someone she has been friends with for years.
You do not have to be BFFs with everyone, but I’ve always told my kids you can never have too many friends - it’s a realization I came to after middle school myself, and it’s served me very well ever since
Other PP here. IME, it says more about the moms than the girls, because if the girls can not be civil, even though they are no longer close friends, the moms should be sending a more positive message to their child to do so. The message should not be exclusion or ignoring, but being civil, even though they do not hang out together any more. It seems to trickle down, because they learn being mean somewhere, so it comes from home (usually a big sister or big brother).
The other mom in this scenario is definitely teaching her kid to be a whiner.
Meh, OP doesn't mind the behavior unless she's on the receiving end of it. Now she's whining that it's blowing up her friend group.
Whining on DCUM is different than whining in the group chat, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, put yourself in this mom’s shoes. Say it’s your daughter who is suddenly being rudely excluded by someone she’s been close friends with for 8 years, and she’s feeling upset / betrayed / hurt. Of course it’s going to bleed over….I’m not saying they need to be besties, but I also would not have interest in remaining close with a mom who taught her daughter that was an acceptable way to treat someone she has been friends with for years.
You do not have to be BFFs with everyone, but I’ve always told my kids you can never have too many friends - it’s a realization I came to after middle school myself, and it’s served me very well ever since
Other PP here. IME, it says more about the moms than the girls, because if the girls can not be civil, even though they are no longer close friends, the moms should be sending a more positive message to their child to do so. The message should not be exclusion or ignoring, but being civil, even though they do not hang out together any more. It seems to trickle down, because they learn being mean somewhere, so it comes from home (usually a big sister or big brother).
The other mom in this scenario is definitely teaching her kid to be a whiner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, put yourself in this mom’s shoes. Say it’s your daughter who is suddenly being rudely excluded by someone she’s been close friends with for 8 years, and she’s feeling upset / betrayed / hurt. Of course it’s going to bleed over….I’m not saying they need to be besties, but I also would not have interest in remaining close with a mom who taught her daughter that was an acceptable way to treat someone she has been friends with for years.
You do not have to be BFFs with everyone, but I’ve always told my kids you can never have too many friends - it’s a realization I came to after middle school myself, and it’s served me very well ever since
Other PP here. IME, it says more about the moms than the girls, because if the girls can not be civil, even though they are no longer close friends, the moms should be sending a more positive message to their child to do so. The message should not be exclusion or ignoring, but being civil, even though they do not hang out together any more. It seems to trickle down, because they learn being mean somewhere, so it comes from home (usually a big sister or big brother).
The other mom in this scenario is definitely teaching her kid to be a whiner.
Meh, OP doesn't mind the behavior unless she's on the receiving end of it. Now she's whining that it's blowing up her friend group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, put yourself in this mom’s shoes. Say it’s your daughter who is suddenly being rudely excluded by someone she’s been close friends with for 8 years, and she’s feeling upset / betrayed / hurt. Of course it’s going to bleed over….I’m not saying they need to be besties, but I also would not have interest in remaining close with a mom who taught her daughter that was an acceptable way to treat someone she has been friends with for years.
You do not have to be BFFs with everyone, but I’ve always told my kids you can never have too many friends - it’s a realization I came to after middle school myself, and it’s served me very well ever since
Other PP here. IME, it says more about the moms than the girls, because if the girls can not be civil, even though they are no longer close friends, the moms should be sending a more positive message to their child to do so. The message should not be exclusion or ignoring, but being civil, even though they do not hang out together any more. It seems to trickle down, because they learn being mean somewhere, so it comes from home (usually a big sister or big brother).
The other mom in this scenario is definitely teaching her kid to be a whiner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I mean, put yourself in this mom’s shoes. Say it’s your daughter who is suddenly being rudely excluded by someone she’s been close friends with for 8 years, and she’s feeling upset / betrayed / hurt. Of course it’s going to bleed over….I’m not saying they need to be besties, but I also would not have interest in remaining close with a mom who taught her daughter that was an acceptable way to treat someone she has been friends with for years.
You do not have to be BFFs with everyone, but I’ve always told my kids you can never have too many friends - it’s a realization I came to after middle school myself, and it’s served me very well ever since
Other PP here. IME, it says more about the moms than the girls, because if the girls can not be civil, even though they are no longer close friends, the moms should be sending a more positive message to their child to do so. The message should not be exclusion or ignoring, but being civil, even though they do not hang out together any more. It seems to trickle down, because they learn being mean somewhere, so it comes from home (usually a big sister or big brother).
Anonymous wrote:I mean, put yourself in this mom’s shoes. Say it’s your daughter who is suddenly being rudely excluded by someone she’s been close friends with for 8 years, and she’s feeling upset / betrayed / hurt. Of course it’s going to bleed over….I’m not saying they need to be besties, but I also would not have interest in remaining close with a mom who taught her daughter that was an acceptable way to treat someone she has been friends with for years.
You do not have to be BFFs with everyone, but I’ve always told my kids you can never have too many friends - it’s a realization I came to after middle school myself, and it’s served me very well ever since
Anonymous wrote:Everyone needs to move on. This girl wants to change friend groups and that is painful for the rejected group. Happens all the time. The mom friendship will not survive the rejection in my experience.
+1Anonymous wrote:Lol OP let me get this straight: you think your daughter should be able to exclude / drop a friend she’s had years of history with, without repercussions……but you also think your mom friend group with whom you have the exact same amount of history should NOT be able to drop / move on from you? Hmm.
Anonymous wrote:+1Anonymous wrote:You are right that your daughter does not and should not have to hang out with this girl just because you are friends with her mom. However, it sounds like she is old enough to know how to decline in a polite and kind way vs. how she did. I would meet with the mom once, explain that you are disappointed with how your daughter handled it, but that the kids can't be forced to be friends, just polite and kind. I doubt it will fix the friendship with her mom, but it is still worth doing.
As a teen, I expected that my mom wouldn't pick fights with my friends' parents because that could have blowback on my friendships. I don't care if they disagreed about PTA initiatives, I expected her to play nice.
You should expect the same of your daughter. You are friends with the mom. She needs to be kind to the daughter. They don't have to be besties, but she needs to put in some effort.
You should be mad at your daughter. It's not okay for her to be mean to a family friend, even if she doesn't really like the girl. She needs to find a way to at least be friendly and kind.
+1Anonymous wrote:You are right that your daughter does not and should not have to hang out with this girl just because you are friends with her mom. However, it sounds like she is old enough to know how to decline in a polite and kind way vs. how she did. I would meet with the mom once, explain that you are disappointed with how your daughter handled it, but that the kids can't be forced to be friends, just polite and kind. I doubt it will fix the friendship with her mom, but it is still worth doing.