Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I disagree. Plus disappointment is apart of life. It's unfortunate but may as well get your kid used to it now. My daughter had a sleep over for her birthday and one of the moms cancelled due to her daughter's bad behavior. Yes I was disappointed but I wasn't about to get upset over her properly parenting her child. Bad behavior does not deserve a reward.
It genuinely surprises me how few people in this thread think this. I’m with you. If my kid is acting like a jerk, I will not regard them with outings and play dates. If that’s a bummer for your kid then that sucks but I’m responsible for raising MY kids.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree. Plus disappointment is apart of life. It's unfortunate but may as well get your kid used to it now. My daughter had a sleep over for her birthday and one of the moms cancelled due to her daughter's bad behavior. Yes I was disappointed but I wasn't about to get upset over her properly parenting her child. Bad behavior does not deserve a reward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I asked how her son was doing today and she said much better, great! I'm a little hurt that she didn't apologize. Sigh. I liked her, too!
You are sounding like a martyr here.
This person had, according to you cancelled play dates in the past because of her child's behavior. You knew that, set up a more elaborate play date and are acting bent out of shape because she cancelled said play date.
Why did you plan an elaborate play date with someone who has cancelled multiple times before?
I get that it sucks for you and your child but you knew who she was and are annoyed because she is who she is. You knew better, so why did you set your child up for disappointment?
And you continue to harp on it. It is done, let it go. Don't set up anything more then meeting at the park with her.
I apologize for the martyr tone.
It’s backwards, I suppose, but I really thought she WOULDNT flake out on bigger plans. A meet up at home...fine, cancel for behavior. But this was such a big excursion, one we had planned and confirmed, so I really thought my chances of her canceling were lower due to the size of the event.
That, was a mistake.
NP, but she cancelled the day before? Solely to punish her kid? That would infuriate me. I agree with others that I'd only cancel big plans like this for sudden illness or truly appalling behavior. My kids are no angels, but I can't think of behavior *that* bad that it would warrant that kind of cancellation.
I don't think you're being crazy at all, and I definitely wouldn't schedule plans with this person again.
Yes. We were going to leave at 8:30am. I confirmed at 3pm the day before. At 5, she canceled due to poor behavior.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I asked how her son was doing today and she said much better, great! I'm a little hurt that she didn't apologize. Sigh. I liked her, too!
You are sounding like a martyr here.
This person had, according to you cancelled play dates in the past because of her child's behavior. You knew that, set up a more elaborate play date and are acting bent out of shape because she cancelled said play date.
Why did you plan an elaborate play date with someone who has cancelled multiple times before?
I get that it sucks for you and your child but you knew who she was and are annoyed because she is who she is. You knew better, so why did you set your child up for disappointment?
And you continue to harp on it. It is done, let it go. Don't set up anything more then meeting at the park with her.
I apologize for the martyr tone.
It’s backwards, I suppose, but I really thought she WOULDNT flake out on bigger plans. A meet up at home...fine, cancel for behavior. But this was such a big excursion, one we had planned and confirmed, so I really thought my chances of her canceling were lower due to the size of the event.
That, was a mistake.
NP, but she cancelled the day before? Solely to punish her kid? That would infuriate me. I agree with others that I'd only cancel big plans like this for sudden illness or truly appalling behavior. My kids are no angels, but I can't think of behavior *that* bad that it would warrant that kind of cancellation.
I don't think you're being crazy at all, and I definitely wouldn't schedule plans with this person again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I asked how her son was doing today and she said much better, great! I'm a little hurt that she didn't apologize. Sigh. I liked her, too!
You are sounding like a martyr here.
This person had, according to you cancelled play dates in the past because of her child's behavior. You knew that, set up a more elaborate play date and are acting bent out of shape because she cancelled said play date.
Why did you plan an elaborate play date with someone who has cancelled multiple times before?
I get that it sucks for you and your child but you knew who she was and are annoyed because she is who she is. You knew better, so why did you set your child up for disappointment?
And you continue to harp on it. It is done, let it go. Don't set up anything more then meeting at the park with her.
I apologize for the martyr tone.
It’s backwards, I suppose, but I really thought she WOULDNT flake out on bigger plans. A meet up at home...fine, cancel for behavior. But this was such a big excursion, one we had planned and confirmed, so I really thought my chances of her canceling were lower due to the size of the event.
That, was a mistake.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I asked how her son was doing today and she said much better, great! I'm a little hurt that she didn't apologize. Sigh. I liked her, too!
You are sounding like a martyr here.
This person had, according to you cancelled play dates in the past because of her child's behavior. You knew that, set up a more elaborate play date and are acting bent out of shape because she cancelled said play date.
Why did you plan an elaborate play date with someone who has cancelled multiple times before?
I get that it sucks for you and your child but you knew who she was and are annoyed because she is who she is. You knew better, so why did you set your child up for disappointment?
And you continue to harp on it. It is done, let it go. Don't set up anything more then meeting at the park with her.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I asked how her son was doing today and she said much better, great! I'm a little hurt that she didn't apologize. Sigh. I liked her, too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your friend actually did the right thing. I had a hard time disciplining our kids because there was always an activity coming up and I didn't want to disappoint the other kid by cancelling. In hindsight, it would have worked much better for my kids to experience an immediate consequence of not getting to do something they really wanted to do.
No, she didn’t. She flaked out on parenting.
Hard disagree. You "flake" when you plan to meet up for drinks and at the last minute say you can't do it. She's parenting her kids the best way she can. Yes, it stinks for OP, but I bet it stinks as much, if not more, for the other mom. OP can still take her kids to the destination and even make it a teachable moment. "I'm sorry, Larla, but Larlo isn't able to come to the playdate because he made bad choices" or however you want to word it. It would help if OP gave us ages and other details, but I get it if she doesn't want to out the other mom.
If the parent can’t figure out other ways to discipline her child then canceling confirmed plans then she shouldn’t make plans because it is unfair to the other party who arranged their schedule.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I asked how her son was doing today and she said much better, great! I'm a little hurt that she didn't apologize. Sigh. I liked her, too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks, all. I asked how her son was doing today and she said much better, great! I'm a little hurt that she didn't apologize. Sigh. I liked her, too!
Apologize for what. Things happen. Either she didn't want to go and used child as an excuse or it was real. You don't reward bad behavior.