Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 6, if your child is in tears, then we know why he is being picked on. Time for you to teach this kid some resilience. I'm willing to bet that if your son didn't scream victim, that the other kid would move on. Work on some snappy answers, a bit of ignoring the taunts, and please teach your kid that big kids don't cry.
Way to blame the victim. Your child is a bully, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No way would I want my child's birthday party to become a statement on this Bully. That is not appropriate for a *class* party like this.
If you want to invite a few friends from school, a few friends from soccer, a few friends on your block - do it. But do not single out one kid in your son's class for exclusion because you know what that will make you and your son? Bullies.
Rise above Op. If you invite the class that includes this kid.
Nope, not inviting the bully is normal behavior that teaches consequences. Act like a jerk, no one wants you around.
Anonymous wrote:No way would I want my child's birthday party to become a statement on this Bully. That is not appropriate for a *class* party like this.
If you want to invite a few friends from school, a few friends from soccer, a few friends on your block - do it. But do not single out one kid in your son's class for exclusion because you know what that will make you and your son? Bullies.
Rise above Op. If you invite the class that includes this kid.
Anonymous wrote:At 6, if your child is in tears, then we know why he is being picked on. Time for you to teach this kid some resilience. I'm willing to bet that if your son didn't scream victim, that the other kid would move on. Work on some snappy answers, a bit of ignoring the taunts, and please teach your kid that big kids don't cry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Question, OP:
What if the bully has a birthday party and invites everyone but your son?
Not OP, but I/we would be fine with that. They are not friends.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I think it is nice of you to worry about this at all. It is a tough situation.
In first grade, my DD was bullied and treated very badly by another child - active exclusion, teasing, name-calling and rock-throwing. She was the only target of this particular girl. So yes, PPs, first graders can be bullies.
In those circumstances, does the bullied kid really have to invite the mean kid to her party and be a good host? Does she have to include someone who is unkind and disrespectful to her on a regular basis? Does she really have to not invite the other kids because it would hurt the bully's feelings? What about the bullied kid's feelings?
We did not invite the other girl to DD's bday party because the other child was mean to DD all. the. time.
I think you're being unfair to your son. It's his birthday and he should be able to invite who he choses.
I agree with PP. I think it's fine to leave the bully out and invite everyone else. You are clearly on your son's side, and there is no reason he should have to change up his birthday party to accommodate a child who is terrorizing him. I don't understand all these posters who think it's mean to exclude one child in this circumstance.
Anonymous wrote:6 is young enough for behaviour to change, but one way it isn't going to change is by being ostracized. Invite the bully, but ask his parents to stay.
Anonymous wrote:OP here with a follow up. I talked to my son after school and told him we couldn't just exclude the other child, but that I was going to ask him parents to stay so that the other kid couldn't make trouble at the party. My son got really upset and started sobbing that he'd rather not have a party than have this child there, so we agreed we're going to cut it down to a smaller group. We're having a tough time figuring out who's going to be in that smaller group without it being too exclusionary to that other kid, but we'll figure it out. I'm glad I gave him the choice, though, rather than simply moving ahead with the plan to invite everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Question, OP:
What if the bully has a birthday party and invites everyone but your son?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here with a follow up. I talked to my son after school and told him we couldn't just exclude the other child, but that I was going to ask him parents to stay so that the other kid couldn't make trouble at the party. My son got really upset and started sobbing that he'd rather not have a party than have this child there, so we agreed we're going to cut it down to a smaller group. We're having a tough time figuring out who's going to be in that smaller group without it being too exclusionary to that other kid, but we'll figure it out. I'm glad I gave him the choice, though, rather than simply moving ahead with the plan to invite everyone.
I think you're being unfair to your son. It's his birthday and he should be able to invite who he choses.