Anonymous wrote:It’s cringey what pp sait but also probably true.
I have two kids - 8th and 10th. The 8th grader has a tight small group and leaving out one kid would be mean and deliberate.
My 10th grader is popular and has so many circles of friends, with a lot of overlap. She has her right inner circle but I could totally see one of the outer circle kids getting missed. Parents of less social kids may not realize they aren’t inner circle….they just see that most of their kids socializing is with certain kids, but that doesn’t always mean that is their close friend, it’s just a kid like mine who invites a lot.
My 10th grader has a lot of annoying qualities and can be very dramatic but one of her best qualities is that she’s very inclusive and “more the merrier”. She recently had a 16th birthday party that grew very large and her list of people who couldn’t come was very short and very specific (ex boyfriend, 2 former friends who screwed her over, and one kinda friend who drinks too much at parties). Anyone who didn’t come but is her friend or sorta friend just didn’t ask her and she might have just assumed they were coming or knew. Trust me, after Saturday I wish she was a little less welcoming. So maybe there wasn’t a formal invite and it’s not some mean girls plot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A friend "group" does not have definite members. Imo there is no group. Every single girl has other friends you're just choosing not to acknowledge.
Yes this is so true. All these parents posting about their kids’ “friend groups” are nutty.
Anonymous wrote:A friend "group" does not have definite members. Imo there is no group. Every single girl has other friends you're just choosing not to acknowledge.
Anonymous wrote:It’s cringey what pp sait but also probably true.
I have two kids - 8th and 10th. The 8th grader has a tight small group and leaving out one kid would be mean and deliberate.
My 10th grader is popular and has so many circles of friends, with a lot of overlap. She has her right inner circle but I could totally see one of the outer circle kids getting missed. Parents of less social kids may not realize they aren’t inner circle….they just see that most of their kids socializing is with certain kids, but that doesn’t always mean that is their close friend, it’s just a kid like mine who invites a lot.
My 10th grader has a lot of annoying qualities and can be very dramatic but one of her best qualities is that she’s very inclusive and “more the merrier”. She recently had a 16th birthday party that grew very large and her list of people who couldn’t come was very short and very specific (ex boyfriend, 2 former friends who screwed her over, and one kinda friend who drinks too much at parties). Anyone who didn’t come but is her friend or sorta friend just didn’t ask her and she might have just assumed they were coming or knew. Trust me, after Saturday I wish she was a little less welcoming. So maybe there wasn’t a formal invite and it’s not some mean girls plot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When the other girls don’t stick up for the one girl, it’s time to change friend groups
This, left out happens. If OP's DD was a core friend, the group out stick up for her. Her still being excluded means she isn't core.
Core friend mom has joined the group chat.
It’s so cringy, isn’t it?
Let me guess that she was momengineering this grouping to her liking since 1st grade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My teen had a Halloween party last night. She tried to invite as many friends as she could but I had to set a very strict limit because teens are crazy, don’t listen and it can spiral quickly out of control. She felt terrible and had to exclude an entire group of friends because if she invited one from that high school, they’d all show up. She also had to tell people no bringing friends. 25 extra kids showed up anyway, I was grateful it wasn’t 100. The problem is snap map, they can see where the party is and univited kids just show up.
Maybe explain to her that viewpoint? Parents have been arrested and reputations ruined over out of control teen parties. At some point, you have to say no and it still won’t work.
That said, I am so very sorry for your daughter. My kid has been on the other side in her shoes not being invited many times and knows the pain which is how she ended up with so many kids at our house. My heart hurts for her. Also trust that you don’t want your kids at some of these parties. I won’t be letting mine throw another one. Sometimes not going is a blessing in disguise.
I am not quite at 100 teen parties yet but we are the hang out house. My kid is very social and would invite everyone and their friends and anyone who wants to come if I let him. We have kids at our house multiple times per week. I tell him he can have X people. Recently he left out a kid because of the max limit I gave him and I found out that the kid was upset and then left my son out. I realized they were on a FaceTime call and I said that my son wanted to invite him over this past weekend but I said no to too many people and that I was sorry. Now friend group in tact again.
You couldn't add ONE KID? You're part of the problem, mom.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes it looks like the parents lack empathy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When the other girls don’t stick up for the one girl, it’s time to change friend groups
This, left out happens. If OP's DD was a core friend, the group out stick up for her. Her still being excluded means she isn't core.
Core friend mom has joined the group chat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When the other girls don’t stick up for the one girl, it’s time to change friend groups
This, left out happens. If OP's DD was a core friend, the group out stick up for her. Her still being excluded means she isn't core.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When the other girls don’t stick up for the one girl, it’s time to change friend groups
This, left out happens. If OP's DD was a core friend, the group out stick up for her. Her still being excluded means she isn't core.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My teen had a Halloween party last night. She tried to invite as many friends as she could but I had to set a very strict limit because teens are crazy, don’t listen and it can spiral quickly out of control. She felt terrible and had to exclude an entire group of friends because if she invited one from that high school, they’d all show up. She also had to tell people no bringing friends. 25 extra kids showed up anyway, I was grateful it wasn’t 100. The problem is snap map, they can see where the party is and univited kids just show up.
Maybe explain to her that viewpoint? Parents have been arrested and reputations ruined over out of control teen parties. At some point, you have to say no and it still won’t work.
That said, I am so very sorry for your daughter. My kid has been on the other side in her shoes not being invited many times and knows the pain which is how she ended up with so many kids at our house. My heart hurts for her. Also trust that you don’t want your kids at some of these parties. I won’t be letting mine throw another one. Sometimes not going is a blessing in disguise.
I am not quite at 100 teen parties yet but we are the hang out house. My kid is very social and would invite everyone and their friends and anyone who wants to come if I let him. We have kids at our house multiple times per week. I tell him he can have X people. Recently he left out a kid because of the max limit I gave him and I found out that the kid was upset and then left my son out. I realized they were on a FaceTime call and I said that my son wanted to invite him over this past weekend but I said no to too many people and that I was sorry. Now friend group in tact again.
You couldn't add ONE KID? You're part of the problem, mom.