Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember your post. Yes, you were dropped.
+1 Your kid is always pushing and grabbing from the host's child, right? Yeah - you have been dropped.
I thought she was dumping out all the stuff on the sensory table when all the other kids the sane age were playing nicely with it. Which would be bad enough. But if she was hitting then it’s even more of a no brainer.
It’s interesting to see the other side, how simply 100% clueless these parents can be. Guess it shows us all that being direct is best in these cases.
OP here. My DD never hit the host child or any child - but she has grabbed toys from her and other kids as well as tried to pull her off a riding toy (I stopped her, of course).
Anonymous wrote:http://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/695413.page
That the previous topic.
OP, you gotta start working on your DD. Discipline, manners and yes, saying NO to her. Emphatically.
I don't know what your connection is to the playgroup (how you joined it in the first place), but it sounds that the host is possibly a higher socio-economic status, with yard, space and time to host and toys that your daughter covets.
Please get your head around this: unless you make an effort to teach your child appropriate behaviors she will be shunned by other parents, by peers and eventually teachers will have a negative view of her. She will only fit in with other "spirited" children or even more unruly ones. Don't set her up for failure like this. She will benefit from boundaries, manners, and your firm "No".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, can you send DD to daycare or camps over the summer? It could be a couple of times a week for a few hours, depending on what's available. You're acting like that playgroup is the only chance your child has to socialize. Get out and see what else is there. There is not point in clinging to company if you feel unwelcome.
We cannot afford it right now and DD would do terribly. She cannot even sit though one 3 minute storytime in a gym class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:11 is a weird nap time for a 2.5 year old. Don't take it personally.
It's a really unusual time. And kids that age are usually at their best in the mornings, so a morning playground makes more sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She totally moved it to that time to kick you out. How wonderfully passive aggressive of this woman!
I really have a strong dislike for you "brutal truth" people. OP is not an idiot and can probably see that there is an issue with her kid's behavior. Does she honestly need Polly Playgroup to rub her nose in it by spelling out that this is the reason??? (if it even IS the reason?)
I think if she did use this excuse as a way to re-structure the group to not include OP and her "high-spirited" kid, it is kind of her not to say "it's because we just can't take your DD's behavior anymore," not "passive aggressive." OP's DD will grow and mature and may not be such a handful in a year. Why should Polly Playgroup burn bridges with OP when they and their children may have occasion at a later time to reconnect?
If OP's daughter grows out of this stage (which she will) and OP ends up on the PTA with Polly and the other playgroup moms at a later time, it sure would be less awkward to rekindle the connection if they can both look back on this situation as a potential schedule conflict rather than OP seething about how Polly rudely criticized her DD.
..... said the mom whose been booted out of a group for also having a kid without proper boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you have an afternoon playgroup for 2.5 year olds? Aren’t they napping? Or was it very late afternoon? All of the playgroups we participated in were in the morning. I think that it makes sense to do what is best for the majority.
It used to be 3 to 5. Yeah, some of the kids came later due to naps but the host DD naps from 1 to 3 and was always up or just getting up when we arrived.
3 to 5 is a terrible time for playgroup. It's getting into dinner time, everyone is cranky.
+1. If this was a different time, I'd be more inclined to say she dropped you. But 3:00-5:00 is not a good time for 2.5 year olds. Mine naps 1:30-3:30, then is cranky for at least half an hour after waking up. 10:00-12:00 is just a better time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since it is the spring break holidays, the mother who has a weekly playgroup one afternoon a week, switched to mornings, 10 to 12, even though she knows my DD naps at 11AM. The host mother texted me about the switch and I responded that we couldn't make it because of DD's nap and she just texted back that her daughter will miss my daughter. There are generally five to six kids, all around 2.5, who participate. I'd posted once before that I didn't think the host mother liked my DD (who is spirited and more active than the other kids including the boys). I guess I will wait to see if she moves playgroup back to the afternoons after this week but I really feel bad about this.
I’m curious what you’re actually feeling bad about - that your kid was grabbing toys and being annoying and generally not fitting with all the other kids and instead of addressing it yourself by finding a more suitable group of wilder kids, you evidently caused them enough stress and negative feelings for so long that you made them come up with an excuse to not have you attend anymore... or simply that your kid is missing host’s child as you said in a later post and you don’t know how to make her feel better. They’re really two different issues.
Both. And there is no more suitable group that I have ever found.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Since it is the spring break holidays, the mother who has a weekly playgroup one afternoon a week, switched to mornings, 10 to 12, even though she knows my DD naps at 11AM. The host mother texted me about the switch and I responded that we couldn't make it because of DD's nap and she just texted back that her daughter will miss my daughter. There are generally five to six kids, all around 2.5, who participate. I'd posted once before that I didn't think the host mother liked my DD (who is spirited and more active than the other kids including the boys). I guess I will wait to see if she moves playgroup back to the afternoons after this week but I really feel bad about this.
I’m curious what you’re actually feeling bad about - that your kid was grabbing toys and being annoying and generally not fitting with all the other kids and instead of addressing it yourself by finding a more suitable group of wilder kids, you evidently caused them enough stress and negative feelings for so long that you made them come up with an excuse to not have you attend anymore... or simply that your kid is missing host’s child as you said in a later post and you don’t know how to make her feel better. They’re really two different issues.
Both. And there is no more suitable group that I have ever found.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The playgroup is ALWAYS at the host mother's house, and nobody ever takes turns hosting? Or only the OP doesn't host?
The playgroup is always at the host mother's house. OP here and no one else has ever hosted.
Anonymous wrote:The playgroup is ALWAYS at the host mother's house, and nobody ever takes turns hosting? Or only the OP doesn't host?