Imagine hosting a dinner for your daughter’s friend, only to have the evening end in awkward silence. That’s exactly what happened to a 37-year-old mom who found herself the b**t of an ill-timed joke about her weight. The incident has led to a standoff between the mom and her daughter’s friend, with the mom insisting on an apology before the friend can be welcomed back into their home. Let’s delve into this intriguing tale of friendship, respect, and the importance of saying sorry. ️
A Family Dinner Turned Sour ️
The New Friend and The Sleepover
The Unpleasant Surprise at Dinner
A Stunned Silence and an Awkward Night
The Demand for an Apology
A Father’s Plea and a Mother’s Stand
The Unresolved Conflict
The Waiting Game ️
A Mother’s Standoff: Apology or No Entry!
In an unexpected turn of events, a dinner joke about a mom’s weight has led to a standoff between her and her daughter’s friend. The mom insists on an apology before the friend can be welcomed back into their home. Despite her husband’s plea to let it go for their daughter’s sake, the mom stands firm. She believes it’s important for the young girl to own up to her mistake and apologize, teaching her a valuable lesson about respect and courtesy. The question now is, will the apology ever come, or will the friendship be left in the balance? Let’s see what the internet thinks of this situation…
YTA. Don’t ruin your daughter’s friendship over one offhand comment
“YTA. Missed teaching moment. Holding grudge against 14-year-old is unfair. Let her have friend.”
YTA. Don’t pick a fight with a 14-year-old child. Shake it off.
Kids say dumb things, but OP overreacted. Let it go!
“YTA. Let it go and let your daughter have a friend, ffs.”
YTA, but let the faux pas slide and help her learn
“YTA. Move on. You are an adult.” Let go of insecurities!
Preventing daughter’s friend over a fat joke? Overreaction or protection?
“YTA. Birds of a feather flock together.” A missed teachable moment.
Is it really an insult or just a harmless observation?
YTA for holding a grudge against a 14-year-old’s comment
INFO: Are you a bigger woman?
Overreacting mom wants to banish daughter’s friend for harmless comment.
“YTA. Demanding apology from a 14 y/o? Move on! “
Adult vs. Teen Drama: Thin-skinned mom confronts daughter’s friend.
“YTA. Not sure why you couldn’t have just used that moment as a teaching moment. The kid is 14. It may have been a ill-planned joke, but I don’t think it was meant to be malicious. Just politely tell the kid that’s inappropriate & was uncalled for. Then move on. If the kid can’t move past that, then sure, stronger measures need to be taken. If the kid never does it again tho, haven’t they learned?”
Engaging discussion on teaching moments and forgiveness!
“Unpopular but NTA. At 14, you’re old enough to know when something you say is hurtful and that you should apologize for it. You arent telling your daughter that they can’t be friends, just that she needs to apologize before she’s welcome to stay the night at your house.”
Bigger woman advises: Correct your daughter, don’t lose the friendship!
YTA, apologize to daughter’s friend and teach her empathy.
NTA. Teach her the importance of appropriate timing and manners!
YTA holding a grudge against a teenager for an offhand comment?
NTA, 14 is old enough to apologize. Daughter’s friend’s behavior matters.
YTA comment: Should’ve let it go, don’t hold grudges against kids
Let it go! Teen’s innocent mistake, forgive and forget.
Asking for an apology after weight comment – NTA
NTA: Speak up against body shaming, teach kindness early on!
YTA: Grow up and stop the childish behavior!
NTA: Stand your ground for an apology in your own home!
Stand your ground! No room for disrespect in your home
NTA! 14-year-olds should know better than to insult someone’s mom
NTA. Apology owed. Important lesson. Don’t let her escape responsibility!
Give her another chance, she might just be an awkward teenager ♀️
Insulting someone’s weight? Not cool! YTA
Demanding an apology for fat-shaming: Who’s in the wrong?
YTA. Don’t punish your daughter for her socially awkward friend.
Let it go! A child’s awkward comment isn’t worth the drama.
Demanding apologies from a 14-year-old? YTA. Let it go.
NTA. Old enough to know better, but why wait months?
Age doesn’t excuse bad behavior! NTA stands up for accountability!
Let it go! A phony apology won’t end well.
Waiting months for an apology from a 14yr old? YTA
YTA wants to beat a dead horse, fragile ego?
NTA: Apology & discussion about etiquette ≠ being an AH.
Last Updated on July 28, 2023 by Diply Social Team