Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op I have boys and a son this age. Can't you ask him what the problem is? "They didn't click" is ridiculous. They were together for what, an hour? And they are going to the same school next year? I would make him go, once, unless there was a serious problem you missed
Actually, not only did I notice some major differences in our boys, but I also asked my DS and his reasons confirmed my thoughts as to WHY they didn't click. In addition, his mom referenced a few of his special traits. Getting into the reasons on this board serve no purpose. At the end of the day, DS didn't "click" with the other boy because of a number of differences. I would never "make" a 10 yr old play with a kid with whom he had nothing in common. And, no, I'm not going to get into what the "differences" are.
Anonymous wrote:Don't do a playdate. Do a bbq and invite several families including them.
Your son will need to be inclusive and polite as the host, but there is less pressure to be "Friends"
The kid is ten- I'm going to cut him and most other ten year olds a break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What you're not seeming to grasp OP is that if you allow your son to effectively reject your friend's son at this early stage, no effort made - you will lose this friend completely. In fact I would say there's a chance she'll never speak to you again.
+1
I do grasp it. After these interactions, I'm actually hoping she'll "never speak to me again." If you read the post, you would have seen that we were acquaintances. Our superficial interactions were positive, but now that I'm getting to know her, I see otherwise. The real problem here is I was trying to be nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm okay with honest: "I'm sorry, my son doesn't seem to want another play date right now (I don't quite know why). Why don't we give it some time?"
If I were on the other end, I would be fine with that. I don't think it's a big deal if kids don't click for whatever reason.
What does I "don't quite know why" mean?
Anonymous wrote:Everyone involved in this situation sounds awful, with the possible exception of the boy that OP's son doesn't like.
Not really- I think the difficult person is the mom of the boy OP's son doesn't like.
She's certainly difficult, but OP is overdramatic and her description of the young man at issue is nasty. Her son sounds like a jerk as well. Certainly, he doesn't have to like the other boy, but texting his mom in the middle of an outing at a restaurant asking to leave? Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:When I was growing up, we had a lot of family friends. My parents were friends with their parents. We would all get together and the kids were expected to play nice with each other, whether we "clicked" or not. We kids never became great friends but these friends were a different kind of friend and we learned to get along with people who weren't exactly like us. As adults we are still in touch and probably better friends now. These are life lessons that kids need to learn. When did it happen that kids get to dictate everyone in their world. Have a family bbq like PP suggested.
Everyone involved in this situation sounds awful, with the possible exception of the boy that OP's son doesn't like.
Not really- I think the difficult person is the mom of the boy OP's son doesn't like.