Photo by: Tom Burndred

Is My Child an Outcast?

by "An Anonymous Mom"
Photo by: Tom Burndred

This has been a tough fourth grade year for my Emma. She was so excited at the beginning of the year to be in class with her BFF. They had never been in class together before and had always wanted to. Their wish came true.

I, on the other hand, was apprehensive. This “BFF” that she has been friends with since she was two years old has always treated Emma poorly. She is more aggressive and bossy toward her, tends to not be fully truthful when faced with something she’s done to be hurtful and is hot and cold on whether she’s “in the mood” to include Emma in her games. To me, this is not what a best friend is all about.

The beginning of the year started out ok, but then slowly things started to change. A few mean statements, a few moments of exclusion… then Emma’s BFF was transported to the top of the cool girl hierarchy and Emma was painfully alone at the bottom. Now all the kids treat her that way.

The dynamics of the class are tough. There are only 8 girls and as I mentioned in a previous post, they are ALL very good at sports. They all love fashion and music. They make fun of anything they consider “babyish” like High School Musical or Hannah Montana. They watch what you wear and how often. They watch what you eat and make sure that if it’s something different or weird that the whole table knows about it. They fight among themselves frequently and treat one another poorly.

Emma doesn’t fit in with that group at all. Her BFF has done everything possible this year TO fit in, even if it means stepping on Emma in the process. Now the group of girls has formulated some sort of pact to not let Emma join them in any activity. First it was gym class. There is an even number of girls so when they have to partner up she always ends up with someone, but if they have to go in groups of three – that’s when no one will let her in. Then it was in class when they had to form groups to read a play aloud. No one would let her join their group and actually had to be forced by the teacher to let her in. Then yesterday it was in music. They were playing a game and the music teacher announced groups of four. So Emma went to the group of girls with three that included her BFF and was told she couldn’t join them by the “leader” of all the mean girls. Emma ended up in tears and the teacher did nothing to correct the mean girl behavior, instead she put Emma in an already formed group of four. She said to Emma at the end of class she was sorry, she knew how girls could be to each other.

It’s hard to believe in third grade Emma was given the award by their teacher as “Most Confidence.” Third grade had different girl drama. That year she had a friend in class with her that was very possessive and over-bearing. She wouldn’t let Emma play with other kids without a fight. She did everything possible to stand next to her in line and sit next to her at lunch. She also did things to tease her relentlessly, like hide her pencils, move her chair to the other side of the room, take her apple from her lunchbox and play catch with it… in other words it drove Emma crazy and we were so glad to be out of that dynamic.

But I think I would prefer possessiveness to exclusion any day. At least with possessiveness the problem is that you are liked “too much” instead of not liked at all.

Emma has no problem making friends. In fact she has a ton of girlfriends and has sleepovers and playdates every weekend. I keep reminding her that she has friends who treat her right, who care about her and who will always be there for her. It’s just that these friends are not in her class this year.

What can I do to help her through this? I sent a note to the teacher yesterday and informed her of all the recent episodes. I asked if she has noticed anything and also if she sees any reason that Emma is treated this way. I told her that we are just going to try our best to make it through the next two weeks without anymore tears and that next year she really needs to be in a class with a better dynamic. I named the worst perpetrators so that the teacher could make sure that she was not in class with them again. At this point I don’t care who her teacher is. All I care about is who is hopefully NOT in class with her. This includes the BFF who has not stuck up for her or tried in anyway shape or form to include her. In fact it was her who initially wouldn’t let her join in gym class back in December. Maybe I’m being harsh, but I really feel she is at the root of the problem. She established her dominance over her by letting the other kids see that even the BFF could exclude her and treat her poorly. The rest of the class is following her example.

Then when no one’s watching the BFF invites Emma for a sleepover.

Two weeks of school left…

An Anonymous Mom maintains a candid, uncensored, on-line journal of a typical middle class mom. She has two daughters, a part time professional job, a hard working husband and she volunteers a ton. According to her, “We are over-scheduled and under-financed… Like I said…typical!”

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194 Comments

It is a great honor and accomplishment to be an "outcast" from some groups. I would be thrilled to be an "outcast" from the Ku Klux Klan. I would be thrilled to be an "outcast" from a Satanic circle. Your daughter should be equally as thrilled to be "outcast" from such an evil coiterie.

My daughter is going into the 8th grade and through the years she has been excluded, included when they want something and often the one on the outside looking in. The girls today are full of gossip, they are boy crazy and facebook and texting are also being used to bully and bad mouth each other, it's a different age and time and i myself don't know what the right answer is other than to be there for her and make sure she knows that their behavoir is not acceptable behavior.

Been there, done that, wish I would've known then what I know now.

Sometimes parents and teachers make things WAY worse for the poor soul they're technically trying to help. If I would've known I wouldn't have gotten into trouble at home for taking a swing at the girls that treated me like that, High School would've been extremely different. Why? Because "those" girls would've known that they couldn't get away with it. If they had tried, I'd remind them...

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Maybe Emma's school counselor can set up a mediation between Emma and the BFF.

This actually brought tears to my eyes as we went through a very similar thing with my 2nd grade daughter this year. Every school is different, but they have a responsibility to deal with the situation. Because the teachers are not consistently responding to this behavior, you should meet with the principal and explain the situation and ask specifically what will be done to address the situation...

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My girls are grown and have girls of their own, going through some of this stuff.
My 3 younger girls had some of this in H.S.
I always encouraged them to be friends with all the girls to varying degrees, and taught them that some girls are just mean and not to be trusted.
Be polite to all, but walk away and/or stand up to those who try to bully you.
After all, that is all it is, when it comes right down to it...

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OK, so (1) the teacher was wrong not to address this, although I don't know if you tried talking to the teacher about this when it first started, or at least when it was getting worse. (2) talk to the girls parents (not just the best friend, but some others), forth grade is not too late to nip this in the bud. Frankly, if I were a parent of one of these mean girls, I'd want to know that my child was bullying...

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Ladies - we've all been there. But please, teaching your daughters to behave badly to prove a point to other badly behaved girls? Give your daughters skills, outlets, hobbies, self-esteem classes. I was in the same place many years ago, but I had my piano as my BFF. Girls who didn't wanna play with me, fine, I wrote songs in my head and played them when I got home. I made friends with the "not-so popular" group...

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I have been there several times . . . When I entered 5 thru 7th grades, I thought I could develop best friends with other kids but instead became an outcast . . .
I realized in the short of all . . . As long as I have a strong family base and confidence of my parents who truly wanted to listen to me and love me so much . . . I still am able to maintain that strength I needed through this difficult period.

Dear Anon Mom, First, I am so sorry your daughter is going through this and I am very sorry you are also experiencing this. Secondly,do not stop at the teacher. Go right to the principal with your concerns, along with explicit information and facts about what has happened and when it has happened. I work in public education, so don't say "they" don't want to hear about it. This is the principal's job -- to ensure a school culture in which all children feel safe and valued...

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Sorry about the lenght of this! Most likely,these girls have moms that are the same type of uppity beeoches.Women often treat each other like this and then have the nerve to wonder why we'll never have a woman president.You know,(and I'm gonna get crap for saying so, but oh well)what exactly is so terrible about a good, old-fashioned fistfight? I know, I'm an awful person for even thinking it...

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i am 14 and am just about to go to high skool. (My moms not here right now so she doesnt know im writing this (: )
when i was ur daughters age, i saw the same things happen to a girl in my class. She wasnt a very good reader, so all the other girls ganged up on her and made fun of the way she looked, dreesed, talked, read, and even how she walked and ran. No one would sit near her at lunch time and everyone thought she was wierd...

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First of all, end the relationship with the "BFF" immediately. No sleepovers, no contact, nothing. She has enhanced her own poularity by throwing your daughter under the bus. For some perverse reason kids are attracted to power and the other girl has used your daughter to demonstrate hers. Next, pick one of the other girls and invite them to do something irresistable with your daughter, like going to a salon and having their nails done...

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sadly, the only way to solve this situation is to be aggressive. Unfortunately your daughter is not aggresive because had she been so she would not be in this situation.
Talk to her and tell her the world is full of really nice people and not so nice people. Explain she is one of those nive people and doesnt need to be treated badly, instead she is to find other nice people like her.
Good luck

I've been dealing with similar situations with my 8 year old since pre-school! I've spoken to teachers, the principal, other parents. We finally opted to switch schools since the one we were at would not address our concerns and my daughter is much happier in the 2 years since that happened.
2 books I can recommend: 0ne from the American Girl series, which is geared towards tweens and teens, the other is "Bullyproof Your Child for Life" which gives coping strategies for kids...

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