Opinion My Wife Won’t Let Our Daughter Attend a Sleepover for a Ridiculous Reason. I Think She Is Way Overreacting.

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My Wife Won’t Let Our Daughter Attend a Sleepover for a Ridiculous Reason. I Think She Is Way Overreacting.​

Advice by Jamilah Lemieux Feb 27, 2026•1:10 PM
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Dear Care and Feeding,

My wife, “Chelsea,” and I have two girls, “Britney,” 8, and “Zoe,” 4. Britney recently received an invitation to her friend “Olivia’s” birthday slumber party. Chelsea, however, is refusing to let her attend for what I think is a ridiculous reason.

Olivia has a 15-year-old brother, “James,” and my wife is convinced he may try to do something sexually inappropriate to our daughter. We’ve known Olivia’s family for more than a year now, and while I’ve only met her brother a handful of times, he’s never given any indication that we should be concerned about him.

Britney is very upset at her mother’s refusal to let her go to the party, as it would have been her first sleepover. Chelsea suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a cousin when she was 11, so I know where her fears are coming from. I don’t want my wife to think I’m being insensitive to her past trauma, but I don’t think prohibiting Britney from staying over at any house where there are adolescent boys present is at all reasonable. How can I get her to allow Britney (and later Zoe) to enjoy this normal childhood experience?

—Not All Boys Are Bad

Dear Not All,

There’s an analogy I’ve heard many times that may be helpful here: If there are a few poison M&Ms in a bag of 30, should you feel safe eating it? What’s three out of 30, right? Is it likely that James or someone else will do something inappropriate? No, but is it impossible? Also no. There are many kids who never attend sleepovers for that reason; I can count on one hand the number I was allowed to attend outside of ones with close family friends, none of them were in homes with older boys, and all of them were accompanied by a warning about what to do if someone tried to violate me.

I think you need to be more sensitive to your wife’s experience. Ask her if there are any circumstances under which she would allow your children to attend a sleepover; if her objection is merely to homes with young men, I honestly think you should honor her feelings instead of challenging their validity. If there are other ways in which your wife seems “overprotective” (I don’t think this is necessarily “over”) because of what happened to her, or if she seems to be often triggered by things that remind her of what she endured, you should encourage her to seek therapy.

I also think you should consider that there are many ways in which young boys can be absolutely awful to young girls outside of predatory behavior, and that limiting situations in which your daughter may be uniquely vulnerable (such as sleeping in the home of a teen boy she doesn’t know well) is not a bad thing. What’s most likely is that James wants nothing to do with his little sister’s friends, but you know what? I wouldn’t be surprised if his presence impacted at least one other girl’s ability to attend this shindig. If you want your daughter to have a sleepover that her mother is comfortable with, host it at your home. I’m not negating the reality of girls being harmed by other girls or women, but your wife experienced one of the worst possible things that can happen to a person as a very young child—and at the hands of a loved one. I can’t blame her for doing anything in her power to prevent your girls from experiencing that. Can you? Every woman has a story (at least one), but to have one like that as an 11-year-old? I hope you can show your wife the empathy she deserves.

Dear Care and Feeding,

My son, “Dewey,” turned 7 last week. Typically when a child in his class has a birthday, it’s normal (and to some extent expected) that they bring cupcakes for the class. The thing is, there are three boys in Dewey’s class that he hates (the feeling is mutual). He said he didn’t want to bring any cupcakes to class rather than give a cupcake to the kids he doesn’t like. I decided to respect his decision. Later that evening, I got a call from his teacher saying that the class had been disappointed when they learned he hadn’t brought anything and asked me why. When I explained my son’s reason to her, she became upset, saying that it was wrong for me to allow my son to engage in “collective punishment” of the entire class. Now I’m concerned Dewey’s teacher is going to take out her frustration on him. Is this worth speaking to the principal over?

—Cupcake Chagrin

Dear Chagrin,

I understand that it sucked for Dewey’s teacher to have to navigate the disappointment of children who have come to expect cupcakes for every birthday, but she crossed a line by judging your parenting and accusing your son of “punishing” children by not giving them cake on his birthday. What if you were broke that week (I’m assuming this may not be a factor for families at Dewey’s school, but these are trying financial times for many people) or had car trouble and just couldn’t pick up cupcakes? Unless your son had explicitly promised cupcakes, and even if he had, these kids need to learn how to experience normal letdowns. Furthermore, you made a decision on treats based on a lesson you wanted your son to learn. I’d probably try one more time to talk things out with the teacher; I’d request a conference, explain what made me uncomfortable about her email, and ask for assurance that your son’s experience in her class won’t be impacted by her views on your decision. If that fails and/or you don’t feel up to challenging her directly, you can let the principal know what happened and that you are concerned about how your son will be treated in this woman’s class.

***

Dear Care and Feeding,

My mother-in-law, “Denise,” has breath so foul it could be classified as a WMD. Our 2-year-old daughter, “Maya,” has reached the point where she doesn’t want to get near her because of it. I’ve tried to get my husband to talk to her about chewing gum or using breath mints, but he refused out of fear of hurting her feelings.

Last weekend, Denise came over, and Maya hid under one of the couch cushions. When Denise tried coax her into coming out, she replied, “Go away, poo-breath!” When Denise asked us if her breath really was that bad, she asked us to be honest. My husband told her it wasn’t, but I said it smells like she gargles with raw sewage. Denise got all huffy and left. Now my husband is angry with me and wants me to apologize. I was asked for my honest opinion and I gave it, so as far as I’m concerned, I have nothing to apologize for. My mother-in-law shouldn’t have asked for the truth if she wasn’t prepared to hear it. It’s not my fault my husband is too much of a chicken to be straight with her, so I’m right here, aren’t I?

—Its Called Mouthwash

Dear Mouthwash,

There are a number of people in your mother-in-law’s life who have failed her by allowing her breath to get that bad, but the way you informed her was not necessary. What you said was nasty, and while she needed to hear the truth, you cant seriously defend your delivery. Apologize to her for what you said, but reiterate that her breath is very strong and add that you are concerned about her; chronic bad breath can be an indicator of a number of health issues, particularly oral health. Tell her that you haven’t wanted to hurt her feelings, but that her breath is hard to tolerate. If she doubles down on anger instead of making a dentist appointment, that’s on her, but say what needs to be said kindly so that you can breathe easy (when she’s not around, of course). Also, ask your husband why he and his family haven’t confronted his mother’s breath yet, and convince him that it needs to be taken seriously.

—Jamilah

I’m a work-from-home dad, and my wife is a stay-at-home mom to our 3- and 7-year-old kids. I’m working 40 hours a week from 8 until 4 from the office next to the living room, and during that time my wife is in charge of the kids (though I help when I’m free). With our schedules, I’m “out the door” just after getting the kids breakfast, and I take over most kid duty from when I get off until bedtime at 8 p.m. Since I am home, though, I’ve noticed over the last four or five months that the kids have been spending an increasing amount of time alone in front of the TV.
 
Olivia has a 15-year-old brother, “James,” and my wife is convinced he may try to do something sexually inappropriate to our daughter. We’ve known Olivia’s family for more than a year now, and while I’ve only met her brother a handful of times, he’s never given any indication that we should be concerned about him.
Retarded moid should read up on statistics. The mother is absolutely in the right here.

Might be a bait article though.....
 
Somehow, I get the feeling that if the first one involved a 15 year old M to F troon, the Negro advice columnist would have called Mom a bigot and written a novel-length response that started, "Well, ackshually, the idea that transwomen, especially TRANSKIDS™ could ever even entertain the idea of doing something to hurt your daughter is a right-wing conspiracy theory, and you need to start listening to people who know TRANSKIDS™ the best, because they're the ones who ackshually make them, er... MEDICALLY TREAT THEM FOR THEIR HORRIBLE DYSPHORIA!"
 
I came in hoping that the reason because one of the "girls" that would be at this sleepover was a troon or something. But, alas.
 
I can count on one hand the number I was allowed to attend outside of ones with close family friends, none of them were in homes with older boys, and all of them were accompanied by a warning about what to do if someone tried to violate me.
This is not normal, right?

Reading this, I would think I was in a place where 50% of kids get molested. Am I crazy?
This comes across like reddit then everyone clapped tier shit.
It is annoying how the guy is painting the concerns as ridiculous before even revealing what they are. Even if you completely disagree, you should be able to see her point of view.

It's like he's conflating "not all" with "not any."

It's the same weird Leftist thinking where they think to themselves, "Most black men aren't violent armed robbers, so that means this black guy stalking me at this ATM at midnight is guaranteed to be safe and harmless."
 
Yeah, I read the news. How else would I stay informed about the important developments of my time?
 
All of the sleepovers I went to where the kid had older siblings, the older kid stayed the night at one of their friends house, because what teen wants to hang around a bunch of middle schoolers anyway.
 
Chelsea suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a cousin when she was 11, so I know where her fears are coming from. I don’t want my wife to think I’m being insensitive to her past trauma, but I don’t think prohibiting Britney from staying over at any house where there are adolescent boys present is at all reasonable.
Gee I wonder why the mom is so concerned.
 
“There’s an analogy I’ve heard many times that may be helpful here: If there are a few poison M&Ms in a bag of 30, should you feel safe eating it? What’s three out of 30, right? Is it likely that James or someone else will do something inappropriate? No, but is it impossible? Also no.”

Wait, I thought the poison candy analogy was RAYCISS? Or is that only when applied to immigrants?
 
I think the dude should just listen to his fucking wife instead of trying to get answers from retards on the internet. If she doesn't feel safe putting a defenseless 8 year old under someone else's care for a night then he should just respect her maternal instincts without bitching and moaning about it.
 
When I was really little, we had mixed friend groups, because there weren't many kids around, and country kids are kind of country. As such, we had mixed sleepovers all the time, and spent many a night playing Star Wars and flashlight tag before passing out in the living room, or tents in the backyard. Was it a good idea? I don't know. But it gave five families at a time a nice night off without their kids.
Nigga what the fuck
The 80's were a bit different. By the time we reached Middle School, the girls and boys had generally segregated themselves, as society dictates we do, and sleepovers were no longer mixed. But in the middle of nowhere, without many prospects, everyone played in the woods from just after breakfast til the dinner bell.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
Reading this, I would think I was in a place where 50% of kids get molested. Am I crazy?
She got molested by her cousin, wich is totally the same as this James guy who's going to return back his room right after grabbing a couple pizza slices. Getting lured into ye old barn where nobody can hear you scream or however this shit goes isn't going to happen in a suburban house with two adults and a gaggle of kids high on high fructose corn syrup.
 
When I was about 8 I was going to sleep over a friend's house. It was a boy and his four sisters. But the boy was a year younger than me. That wasn't the issue. There was a neighbor boy who was 14 that wanted to stay too. I didn't understand it at the time. But he made me uncomfortable. I realised when I was older that he had been sexually harassing me. Anyway, I went home. My younger siblings stayed. But I wasn't going to stay there with an older boy that I was afraid of.

Years later something happened to him. He either got a head injury or brain damage from an OD. Something. But he was completely retarded. I saw him at the dollar store asking his grandmother if he could have a coloring book. Definitely no longer all there. I saw him again in Kmart awhile later and he was like stalking me. Just appearing anywhere I was and staring with this weird, vacant stare. So I left the store. It was weird.

Anyway, I totally understand why the mother won't let the daughter go to the sleepover. It might be totally unfounded and the 15 year old probably just thinks the kids are lame and embarrassing. But the general concern is still always gonna be there even if the 15 year old has zero interest in 9 year old girls.

Nigga what the fuck

Well I did too. But the boy in question was younger than me and most of the others did not stay late. They'd go home. When that creepy 14 year old was allowed to stay that's when 8 year old me just noped out of there without even fully understanding the way he was actually treating me.
 
Is it an US thing to constantly worried about rape and child-molestation?
It is now a concern here in Europe too, but only because of the foreigners.
When I was a kid, pedophilia or rape were so fucking rare it was not a concern for anybody. We were pretty much free-roaming children in the neighborhood because it was so safe. That still is the case, most of the time.

Are parents in other countries constantly paralyzed by fear that every adult or adolescent male might be out to rape their children?
 
Wstecz
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