Anonymous wrote:She's incredibly hurt, so I did send the mom a text (I do know her, it's not like I am a random parent she has never met before) saying that my DD was hurt that she couldn't have been included in the playdate, it was hard to watch the girls walk off without her, and next time, could she also join in. I was very kind about it but trying to advocate for my daughter.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you should try and salvage your reputation and apologize to the mom you tried to blame for your parental shortcomings. "Julie, I'm sorry. With a little distance, I realize I was way out of line. I'm sorry to laying my parental anxieties on you."
Anonymous wrote:My daughter made fast friends with two little girls in kindergarten who seemed very sweet. I also liked their moms. As time went on, though, I came to realize that the moms were WAY oversensitive about things. They would describe themselves as "heartbroken" if their daughters reported a child in the class calling them "smelly" or some similar slight. And then they would offer each other all kinds of support over the horrors of that injustice and call to check on the child etc etc. I couldn't watch all that drama unfold. Also, neither mom EVER thinks her daughter is at fault for anything. Guess who doesn't get invited to anything anymore?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was trying to advocate for my kid. She spent the afternoon alone crying while three friends were off having fun; how is that in any way fair? I am on the fence with how to respond to this girl's mother. She just responded with a "heart" emoji on my text and said, "I'm sorry she felt left out. Three kids is my max for playdate supervision. Hope we can see you soon." Not even an invite or any kind of ownership of the behavior.
Maybe I am being insecure or irrational but seeing your kid in tears, left out, visibly, hurts.
There will be other playdates where other people aren't included. There will be parties that people won't invited to. There will be colleges that she won't get into. That's the way life is. You need to help her reframe her negative thinking into something positive. Ie. she needs to be able to say "That's a bummer! I can go home and do X, though, and that will be fun, and I can play with Larla on another day."
Not entirely sure how you let her wallow in her room for an entire afternoon. You should have been helping her find alternative activities besides wallowing, and then helped her plan another playdate later.
Anonymous wrote:She's incredibly hurt, so I did send the mom a text (I do know her, it's not like I am a random parent she has never met before) saying that my DD was hurt that she couldn't have been included in the playdate, it was hard to watch the girls walk off without her, and next time, could she also join in. I was very kind about it but trying to advocate for my daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was trying to advocate for my kid. She spent the afternoon alone crying while three friends were off having fun; how is that in any way fair? I am on the fence with how to respond to this girl's mother. She just responded with a "heart" emoji on my text and said, "I'm sorry she felt left out. Three kids is my max for playdate supervision. Hope we can see you soon." Not even an invite or any kind of ownership of the behavior.
Maybe I am being insecure or irrational but seeing your kid in tears, left out, visibly, hurts.
This person is not your friend OP.
First the silly deflection and changing the topic nonsense with DD.
Now, the "I'm sorry she felt left out." which is putting it all on your daughter. No ownership at all.
A nicer person, a friend, would have said,
"I am sorry she was sad and that we could not include her today. Three kids is my max for playdate supervision. Hope we can plan something soon."
FWIW it's worth, I have a boy. The local playground is the boys' gathering spot, thank goodness!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was trying to advocate for my kid. She spent the afternoon alone crying while three friends were off having fun; how is that in any way fair? I am on the fence with how to respond to this girl's mother. She just responded with a "heart" emoji on my text and said, "I'm sorry she felt left out. Three kids is my max for playdate supervision. Hope we can see you soon." Not even an invite or any kind of ownership of the behavior.
Maybe I am being insecure or irrational but seeing your kid in tears, left out, visibly, hurts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI that I would not invite your child to anything in the future after the text you sent. You’re going to ruin things for your daughter for the rest of her school career unless you cut this out.
This. You reputation will proceed you and your kid won't be invited to much if you don't calm the crazy. No one will want to deal with the crazy mom.
Anonymous wrote:FYI that I would not invite your child to anything in the future after the text you sent. You’re going to ruin things for your daughter for the rest of her school career unless you cut this out.