monkeybug
<font color=blue>I feel safer when I know where th
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2009
- Messages
- 3,589
In a perfect world... Yes, everyone would have a 'thick skin', and would be able to be happy about being excluded from another groups 'celebration'....
In the real world...
And, ESPECIALLY in the social world of girls this age...
Ummmm.. NOT SO MUCH.
Just a huge reality check.
And, while I am not flaming or disagreeing with anyone on either side...
Just personally, I think that shirt stating the particular girl's (using her actual name) Bat Mitzvah ROCKED.... is the most self absorbed, self-promoting, narcissistic, thing I have seen in quite some time. Seriously, like I said, something I would just never, ever, do. Regional or not.
Well of course a child is going to be hurt and angry about being excluded. They're children. Our role as the adults in their lives isn't to vilify the group of kids making them feel bad though, it's to help guide them to a more appropriate response, one that doesn't leave them feeling their self worth is all wrapped up in the value others place on them. It's to tell them we know that it hurts and makes them angry and feels unfair, but the best thing to do is not dwell on those feelings or let them damage relationships. Not everyone gets to be included all the time and that is okay. It's not a reflection on them, and It doesn't make the people who didn't include them bad either. I would also encourage my children to remember how things like this make them feel so that they don't make others feel that way someday.
As an adult I don't get upset or angry if I'm not included in everything my circle of friends do, because that's the behavior and attitude my parents modeled for me. I knew from an early age that life is not a competition and constantly comparing what I had or was doing to what others had or were doing was just a recipe for unhappiness.