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Parent Support Forums
General Parenting
another lost friendship
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<blockquote data-quote="klmno" data-source="post: 161726" data-attributes="member: 3699"><p>Welcome! That is a tough situation- I am surprised that the Mom sounded so "permanent" about her request. Did she go in to the specifics of what led to this?</p><p></p><p>I wonder if just getting to know her yourself a little then lettting her know that her child is welcome in your home and you could supervise yourself would make her open up to the idea of them remaining friends. Or, have a cookout and invite her and the child- letting her know that you'd like to help your son act in more appropriate ways. If she isn't open to anything, then I guess all you can do is let it go. difficult child has lost his best friend this year- I think in part because his parents are the type that right things off instead of trying to talk about a way to improve the situation.</p><p></p><p>Good luck! Oh- you might want to remove the complete name of your son since this board is open for public viewing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="klmno, post: 161726, member: 3699"] Welcome! That is a tough situation- I am surprised that the Mom sounded so "permanent" about her request. Did she go in to the specifics of what led to this? I wonder if just getting to know her yourself a little then lettting her know that her child is welcome in your home and you could supervise yourself would make her open up to the idea of them remaining friends. Or, have a cookout and invite her and the child- letting her know that you'd like to help your son act in more appropriate ways. If she isn't open to anything, then I guess all you can do is let it go. difficult child has lost his best friend this year- I think in part because his parents are the type that right things off instead of trying to talk about a way to improve the situation. Good luck! Oh- you might want to remove the complete name of your son since this board is open for public viewing. [/QUOTE]
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another lost friendship
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