Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They are definitely an occasional thing with our suburban ES and MS kids (I only know one family who doesn’t allow them at all). A kid with an early something the following morning might get picked up late and yes, even come back for breakfast the next morning.
At our house, we make it clear that screens end by midnight, so they chat for a bit, then end up getting a reasonable amount of sleep.
That doesn't sound like a reasonable amount of sleep to me. My kids are usually in bed by 9:30. Even the 13 year old.
Anonymous wrote:They are definitely an occasional thing with our suburban ES and MS kids (I only know one family who doesn’t allow them at all). A kid with an early something the following morning might get picked up late and yes, even come back for breakfast the next morning.
At our house, we make it clear that screens end by midnight, so they chat for a bit, then end up getting a reasonable amount of sleep.
Anonymous wrote:Yes scrap it. No one wants to leave their kid overnight. Especially if you are not close to the other family for obvious reasons
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH will absolutely not allow our children to sleepover anywhere, including extended family’s homes. He was raised in extremely impoverished conditions and thinks it’s such an unnecessary risk to put on your children for very little payoff.
Genuine question, not trying to be snotty. What does DH’s impoverished background have to do with his stance on sleepovers?
His childhood was spent in a bad neighborhood with a lot of crime and absent parents. He went to sleepovers and was definitely exposed to things children should not be.
What was he exposed to at sleepovers that he didn’t see in his everyday impoverished life? And if he saw bad things because he lived in a bad neighborhood what does that have to do with his children sleeping over a friend’s house?
Anonymous wrote:In many social circles, sleepovers have gone the way of prank calls. It's something fun you did as a kid, but now you know better and technology changes have made everything very very different from when you were a kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter wants to have a sleepover with 5 friends for her birthday coming up (turning 9, friends are 8-9). I’ve already talked with the mom of her best friend and that mom said no to sleeping over. I’ll offer to do a sleep under I guess but are sleepovers really not a thing? I remember doing them much earlier growing up.
Should we scrap the sleepover plan and do something else?
My kids do sleepovers, both at our home and at their friends houses, nbd
Anonymous wrote:My daughter wants to have a sleepover with 5 friends for her birthday coming up (turning 9, friends are 8-9). I’ve already talked with the mom of her best friend and that mom said no to sleeping over. I’ll offer to do a sleep under I guess but are sleepovers really not a thing? I remember doing them much earlier growing up.
Should we scrap the sleepover plan and do something else?
Anonymous wrote:In many social circles, sleepovers have gone the way of prank calls. It's something fun you did as a kid, but now you know better and technology changes have made everything very very different from when you were a kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH will absolutely not allow our children to sleepover anywhere, including extended family’s homes. He was raised in extremely impoverished conditions and thinks it’s such an unnecessary risk to put on your children for very little payoff.
Genuine question, not trying to be snotty. What does DH’s impoverished background have to do with his stance on sleepovers?
His childhood was spent in a bad neighborhood with a lot of crime and absent parents. He went to sleepovers and was definitely exposed to things children should not be.