mickeyfan2
DIS Legend
- Joined
- May 21, 2004
- Messages
- 16,084
Kids need their own friends. The mom should stop this inclusion. The older sister needs to make friends of her own not be a tag along.
Marseeya said:For those with more than one child, do you insist that they have to be involved in everything equally?
A little background: we told DD that she might be able to take a friend with us on our WDW trip, fully intending that we'd pay for the child's entire trip, except spending money. Of DD's two best friends, only one would be able to afford spending money. Before we could warn DD NOT to tell her friends about this, she asked one of them (the one with no money) if she could go, and the mother said only if we take the older sister.Needless to say, I had to explain to DD that she was not to discuss this trip with anybody again!
Tonight, DD was asking me if she cleaned her bedroom if she could have her friend sleep over. I told her she could have one friend if she did. Again, she asked the friend and the mother said not without the older sister.
Have any of you heard of people who do this? I feel really bad for my DD's friend if she can't do anything without her sister. I really wouldn't mind doing more for this girl, but I don't know... it just feels like such an imposition to be expected to take on another kid.
I'm just curious about other people's opinions on this. I don't mean to sound like a scrooge or anything.
). In our neighborhood now, the girls are all 9, 10, and 11...younger DD is more likely to be playing with the kids because she's more social - even the ones who are older DD's age.Marseeya said:For those with more than one child, do you insist that they have to be involved in everything equally?
I'm just curious about other people's opinions on this. I don't mean to sound like a scrooge or anything.

Here I am trying to do some individual play time for my son and then I have to host the much younger brother who later cried to go home.
