Carpool diva scores no points with this mom
BY Ask Amy
Monday, November 12, 2012
11/12/12 at 4:07 AM
Dear Amy: My teenage daughter is on a competitive sports team that practices three times per week. She is in a carpool with three other players to save time and money. The other three girls are very good friends. The team's star player is their social leader too.
The girls are rather rude, especially their ringleader, "the diva." Diva is very annoying to me because her attitude is ugly and toxic, although my daughter seems able to "blow it off." The girls do not say one word to my daughter when we are in the car. They talk or text among themselves. They pass around food or candy without offering anything to my daughter.
If I try to engage in a benign conversation, they respond with disrespectful one-word responses (when the diva is not in the car, the other girls will include my daughter somewhat).
I was 15 minutes late picking them up recently, and she set such a hostile tone in the car that no one spoke. I've tried to approach this topic a couple of times gently with "diva's" parents, but her mother laughed it off.
It would be very inconvenient for me to lose this carpool, and this doesn't seem to bother my daughter. However, it bothers me. What should I do? - Annoyed Mom
Dear Annoyed: The only surefire way to prevent this dynamic from happening in your car would be to accept the inconvenience of driving your daughter solo.
Ask your daughter what it is like on the basketball court or when she rides in their cars. If she says she can handle it, let her, but make sure she knows you are in her corner.
You could try to mix it up by having "the diva" sit up front in the car with you, but if you don't want to micromanage this dynamic, engage your daughter and ignore the nonsense, unless it is directed toward you or your kid (or they are trashing someone else).
If so, you can say, "Ladies, I expect you to be decent and polite in my car. If you have a problem with this, let me know." Truly toxic rudeness shouldn't be sanctioned with silence.
Dear Amy: "Coughed Out" complained about a colleague who "sniffles, ahems and hacks."
That person could be me. I've got the type of asthma that makes me cough (rather than wheeze), sniffle and clear my throat a lot. It's not allergy-based and hits without warning.
Despite every effort, nothing will totally stop these attacks, because asthma is a chronic condition. So be kind - that person hacking hates it way more than you do. - Cougher, Hacker, Sniffler
Dear Cougher: I can well imagine that hacking through the day is no fun.
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