Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“My new friends invited me to a barbecue at their house with a pool. There was no lifeguard and lots of kids in the pool. The parents were only watching the kids sporadically, so I felt for safety I had to spend the entire bbq watching everyone else’s kids since rhe other parents just kept walking away to focus on their conversations and food. Do you think my new friends like me or are just using me for free babysitting? Also who has a pool party where the adults don’t get in the pool??”
OP here. As I said, there was ALWAYS one adult watching the kids in the pool. Parents took turns in shifts to do this. They weren't sporadically watching the kids: there was always someone standing there watching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“My new friends invited me to a barbecue at their house with a pool. There was no lifeguard and lots of kids in the pool. The parents were only watching the kids sporadically, so I felt for safety I had to spend the entire bbq watching everyone else’s kids since rhe other parents just kept walking away to focus on their conversations and food. Do you think my new friends like me or are just using me for free babysitting? Also who has a pool party where the adults don’t get in the pool??”
Nobody asked her to be responsible. That was her choice.
And so you would freeze her out because she is more concerned about water safety? Maybe her kid is a weak swimmer. Maybe her kid has seizures and has to be watched closely. Maybe she had a sibling drown. Maybe she’s just highly conscientious and all the other adults were drunk.
We weren't drunk. Two of our good friends are Muslim, so out of respect for them we don't drink when they are invited. Nobody was drunk.
And again, there was always one adult stationed at the pool.
There was an adult watching Friend A and her kid when they were the only ones in the pool (for hours)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“My new friends invited me to a barbecue at their house with a pool. There was no lifeguard and lots of kids in the pool. The parents were only watching the kids sporadically, so I felt for safety I had to spend the entire bbq watching everyone else’s kids since rhe other parents just kept walking away to focus on their conversations and food. Do you think my new friends like me or are just using me for free babysitting? Also who has a pool party where the adults don’t get in the pool??”
Nobody asked her to be responsible. That was her choice.
And so you would freeze her out because she is more concerned about water safety? Maybe her kid is a weak swimmer. Maybe her kid has seizures and has to be watched closely. Maybe she had a sibling drown. Maybe she’s just highly conscientious and all the other adults were drunk.
We weren't drunk. Two of our good friends are Muslim, so out of respect for them we don't drink when they are invited. Nobody was drunk.
And again, there was always one adult stationed at the pool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the host did not do a good job of introducing her to people and integrating her into adult conversation.
100%. Bad hosts.
Anonymous wrote:very few people know this about me hut in 1997 my first cousin drowned in my grandparents family pool which we had for generations. when everyone is watching the pool… no one is watching the pool. i never, ever, ever am not in the actual pool if any of my kids (7-14) are in the pool. She may have had a similar trauma, like I said I tell almost
no one but just dont leave my children.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the host did not do a good job of introducing her to people and integrating her into adult conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't have let my 11 year old be in a pool where adults were "occasionally walking over to look, taking turns so that (hopefully) one adult was always watching". So, in this situation, my choices would be to stay by the pool the whole time. Getting in would have made that slightly less awkward since apparently you'd think I was rude rather than judgmental.
Were adults drinking?
No, you misunderstood. Adults were occasionally walking over to look IN ADDITION TO the one adult stationed at the pool to keep watch. There was always at least one adult there. And usually two, because someone would wander over to stand and talk with the one on watch. Then there was Friend A in the pool with her kid, ignoring everyone else, so I guess three adults.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. In addition to my last comment re: someone always being stationed at the pool to watch, there were not "lots of kids" in the pool. Most of us didn't bring kids. Other than Friend A, only two other people brought kids. And the other kids eventually left the pool to play soccer on the lawn or read a book, or to sit by their mom and eat barbecue with the bigger group. Only Friend A and her kid remained in the pool, alone, for hours after the other kids left. They didn't even eat anything.
These extra details make me think the mom might have been trying to be a good companion to her 11-year-old, who was stuck at a gathering with kids she didn't know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. In addition to my last comment re: someone always being stationed at the pool to watch, there were not "lots of kids" in the pool. Most of us didn't bring kids. Other than Friend A, only two other people brought kids. And the other kids eventually left the pool to play soccer on the lawn or read a book, or to sit by their mom and eat barbecue with the bigger group. Only Friend A and her kid remained in the pool, alone, for hours after the other kids left. They didn't even eat anything.
These extra details make me think the mom might have been trying to be a good companion to her 11-year-old, who was stuck at a gathering with kids she didn't know.
Anonymous wrote:“My new friends invited me to a barbecue at their house with a pool. There was no lifeguard and lots of kids in the pool. The parents were only watching the kids sporadically, so I felt for safety I had to spend the entire bbq watching everyone else’s kids since rhe other parents just kept walking away to focus on their conversations and food. Do you think my new friends like me or are just using me for free babysitting? Also who has a pool party where the adults don’t get in the pool??”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't have let my 11 year old be in a pool where adults were "occasionally walking over to look, taking turns so that (hopefully) one adult was always watching". So, in this situation, my choices would be to stay by the pool the whole time. Getting in would have made that slightly less awkward since apparently you'd think I was rude rather than judgmental.
Were adults drinking?
No, you misunderstood. Adults were occasionally walking over to look IN ADDITION TO the one adult stationed at the pool to keep watch. There was always at least one adult there. And usually two, because someone would wander over to stand and talk with the one on watch. Then there was Friend A in the pool with her kid, ignoring everyone else, so I guess three adults.