Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
The bolded is the issue. She's probably obnoxious and highly controlling at home too and telling her kid to keep pushing your son and your son will eventually say yes.
Pretty sad, but in this day and age and country, my mind went to a potential school shooting threat. I hope the counselors can get the boy the support he needs.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
Anonymous wrote:My DD had this happen. She responded with reasons she couldn't hang out like 4 or 5 times in a row (I told her she can always say 'my mom won't let me') and then just stopped reading that girls' texts. The girl couldn't take a hint.
I've told my daughter she can ALWAYS blame me for things. My mom took my phone away. I'm grounded. I'm not allowed to do sleepovers right now. My mom is making me do errands/clean the house with her.
Anonymous wrote:I just want to say that 52 texts from one child isn't that many if it's spread out over several months. OP didn't say they were all in one day. If the OP's son responded intermittently to them, the texter may have thought it was ok to send one text a day or every couple days. Shoot, for kids who like each other, they could text back & forth that many times in 48 hrs. I think you handled it just right, just am not as sure as all the other PPs that the awkward kid texting is an unhinged stalker - sounds more like a clueless 12 year old boy who doesn't realize that the friendship is not mutual (or does realize it & is freaked out & wishes that weren't true).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
No one said he didn't have the "right" to decline and invite. Jesus, lady.
OP here. Let me explain. I know there are some out there who would say the boy is simply lonely and needs a friend. My son gave him chances and it is not a match. Perhaps my choice of language offended you, but my point is even if this boy is struggling, he does need help, but my child also needs to be free to decline. It does sound like most people understand boundaries. I do hope he gets the support he needs which is why I appreciated the suggestion to speak with the counselor.
To be clear, no one (including me) is saying he needs to be friends with the boy, engage his texts, or anything. It "offends" me only to the extent that I think you greatly exaggerated the danger/issue here. And I also think you did your son a disservice and not teaching him how to set firm boundaries in an awkward situation. But, that's just my view and others clearly feel differently.
Having said that, it seems to be handled fine in that the resolution seems to have worked for your son, and hopefully the boy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
No one said he didn't have the "right" to decline and invite. Jesus, lady.
OP here. Let me explain. I know there are some out there who would say the boy is simply lonely and needs a friend. My son gave him chances and it is not a match. Perhaps my choice of language offended you, but my point is even if this boy is struggling, he does need help, but my child also needs to be free to decline. It does sound like most people understand boundaries. I do hope he gets the support he needs which is why I appreciated the suggestion to speak with the counselor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
No one said he didn't have the "right" to decline and invite. Jesus, lady.
WHOA. You sound sane.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
No one said he didn't have the "right" to decline and invite. Jesus, lady.
OP here. Let me explain. I know there are some out there who would say the boy is simply lonely and needs a friend. My son gave him chances and it is not a match. Perhaps my choice of language offended you, but my point is even if this boy is struggling, he does need help, but my child also needs to be free to decline. It does sound like most people understand boundaries. I do hope he gets the support he needs which is why I appreciated the suggestion to speak with the counselor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
Hopefully this works and this child will now back off. No backlash, your child doesn't have to engage with someone who makes him uncomfortable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
No one said he didn't have the "right" to decline and invite. Jesus, lady.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. We let the counselor know and she is reaching out to the counselor assigned to the boy. I did not feel comfortable texting the boy myself because I don't know him well enough to know how stable he is, but the counselor suggested we have him text something like, "I am sorry I don't have the time to hang out. You are a great kid, but getting so many texts makes me really uncomfortable. I will not be responding to more texts." Then he blocked the number. Not sure how I feel about that because again I don't know the child's level of emotional well being and what he can handle. I won't reach out to the mom because I do know she is a pistol when it comes to defending her son and she is at the school a lot causing trouble.
I'm sure I will get some backlash, but I support my child's right to decline an invite from someone he already have chances to.
No one said he didn't have the "right" to decline and invite. Jesus, lady.