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PEOne of the hardest parenting moments is hearing your child was left out.
That drop in your chest is real. The urge to fix it fast makes sense. But what often matters more than solving the social problem is how your child experiences you in that moment.
Being left out is not a sign your child is failing socially. It’s part of learning how relationships work. What sticks long term is whether they feel safe bringing that pain to you without being rushed, dismissed, or rescued.
Before responding, take a breath. Notice your own feelings, anger, sadness, confusion, and try not to lead with them. Start with open-ended questions to understand how your child felt and how they handled it. Then problem-solve together.
If school friendships feel shaky, help widen their world.
“Are there friends outside of school you’d like to see?”
“Should we plan a play date?”
This reminds them connection isn’t limited to one lunch table.
It also matters to say this clearly. Being left out hurts, and it does not define their worth. If this becomes a repeated pattern, loop in the teacher to get curious about what’s going on. And still let your child know, “I’m here with you, and we’ll figure this out together.”
When kids learn they can talk through rejection with support, they build confidence that lasts far beyond the cafeteria.
If this reframed something for you, follow @pedsdoctalk or share it with a parent in the thick of school-age emotions.
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Question for you. What do you wish an adult had said to you the first time you felt left out?
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