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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Teenage boys ruined my carpets - should I contact their parents?

806 replies

thecranberries · 21/01/2023 10:40

My 16 yr old DC had a birthday party last night. About 40 teenagers attending. Fine. My DC is responsible as are her friends. I went out, obviously, and came back at 11.30pm.

I found a bunch of girls mopping my wooden floor and stone kitchen floor, two girls picking up clumps of mud, one girl vacuuming up mud (ruined my Dyson as mud was wet) and various other girls using towels to wipe down what they could.

My DC told me what boys had done: they'd gone into the garden beyond the decking, despite being told repeatedly not to do so. They went into my garden shed and took out garden spade, fork and rake and just dumped them into garden, leaving shed door open. They ruined my lawn. And they'd repeatedly gone in and out - they all wear those clumpy trainers - and just spread the mud. (It's been very wet recently).

After being told many times not to do so, she finally told all the boys to leave, and as they were doing so, some attempted to filch things from my home, so DC and a few other girls checked the boy's pockets before ejecting them.

All the girls responsible, well behaved, and considerate. All the boys - led by one especially - irresponsible, disrespectful, boarish, and the lead boy - simply kept laughing when asked to behave responsibly and not rile up the others.

So, AIBU to call the parents of the lead boy and tell them exactly what their DS is like? I have to pay for my carpets and rugs to be cleaned and spend my day deep cleaning my home from debris I had not factored in rather than just the normal tidy up.

I know my DC will be extremely embarrassed at my actions, ie calling the parents of lead boy - but at the same time, I am left with an unexpected bill and extra work at a particularly time-poor moment in my week.

Just for record, all boys come from 'nice' families, and go to very good state and private schools.

WWYD?

OP posts:
SoupDragon · 23/01/2023 11:00

ClockingTime · 23/01/2023 09:25

Well fancy that, private school students not sitting nicely with a cup of tea and a piece of birthday cake.
Jolly poor form.
Maybe some boys from the local comp gatecrashed with their muddy clumpy trainers and caused the damage and blamed it on the toffs. The ruffians!

From the very first post: Just for record, all boys come from 'nice' families, and go to very good state and private schools.

SoupDragon · 23/01/2023 11:01

Cormick · 23/01/2023 09:15

😱 no. I can't agree. It has to be the patriarchy.

🙄

Ursula82 · 23/01/2023 11:03

I have had many teens over to my house over last few years.

one child state
one child private

the only difference

state school pupils come over, rarely make eye contact and difficult to engage in even the most basic of conversation with me.

The private school pupils, make eye contact, engage in Discussion and often even ask me how I am, how’s work, did I enjoy my holiday etc

SleeplessInEngland · 23/01/2023 11:03

I hope the OP's learned her lesson about teenagers.

Ursula82 · 23/01/2023 11:04

Both group prone to exactly the same kind of teen mischief though!

Ursula82 · 23/01/2023 11:04

SleeplessInEngland · 23/01/2023 11:03

I hope the OP's learned her lesson about teenagers.

Ha! Did you read her updates?! Not. A. Chance

Bellaboo01 · 23/01/2023 11:12

thecranberries · 22/01/2023 16:26

Hello

To those who offered considered opinions, thank you.

To those who just chose to be nasty, then I wish you would simply think beyond a knee jerk reaction before proffering any opinion, especially when devoid of actual facts.

To those who just changed facts (stating my garden was dug up - it wasn't) but garden tools taken out from shed and strewn on lawn.

I never stated I wanted any money / compensation. Yes, it is more clearing up than I'd anticipated. And yes, I should suck that one up.

And for the record, the majority of teenagers invited are friends of my DC - my DC has a bunch of 9 close friends, and as is normal in my neck of the woods, they each have connection to other friends from different schools, hence their world has expanded.

To those who offered unpleasant attacks, have none of you sat down and jointly looked at TikTok/Snapchat accounts of your children? They interact with a huge group of kids they know.

This is a good thing to mix with many different people. There were a few friends of friends my DC didn't know well, but who came with a friend she trusts.

Yes, it was the boys who dragged the mud in and a couple of girls. My DC close friends all admonished them, and the girls immediately apologised and came in. The boys immediately didn't.

And the lead boy was the one who was the only drunk one. The rest had drunk, but were not boarish. It is possible for teenagers to drink and not become drunk.

I was at a local restaurant, 10 mins away from my home. I checked upon my DC every half hour and it was going well and everyone was having a good time.

Towards the end of the eve, some boys went into garden beyond decking and that is when they began to create mischief.

Why do I know this to be fact? Because DC tells me everything and we openly talk about all issues related to her life. She asks my advice on many issues, and tests her opinions on other issues by engaging in conversation.

The only reason I posted was to gauge opinion re whether I call parent of lead culprit.

If my child attended a party and was disrespectful on any level, then I'd want to know.

I feel happy about my decision to trust my DC. And this is in common with many parents in my neck of the woods. Which 16 year old wants a parent hanging about? I know I wouldn't.

Do you know, 16 year olds can get married, learn to drive, join the army etc? There are many many responsible, independent and truthful teenagers, and my DC is one of them, as are her close friends, hence she is friends with them.

And because DC, in line with her close friends, talk to their parents about everything, trust is built and there are no pitfalls to encounter.

Yes, it was unexpected that a 16 year old (just a few 15 year olds on the cusp of 16, but no 17year olds or older at the party) would be disrespectful of trashing an invite to a party.

And it was extremely surprising that only the girls were cleaning up. The boys had left by then. Partly because my DC threw out the main culprits.

But as it turned out, a few boys did actually help in the cleaning. And it turns out that in their group chat today, all of the children have 'told off' the main culprits and have even stated that these culprits would not be invited out with them again.

They are dealing with the matter in a responsible manner.

Yes, I've had to clean. More than I'd expected. But I think the reason I posted this was because I could not believe someone's child, in this day and age, would be so disrespectful. But, as I said, I didn't need to do anything about it as the group have taken care of the matter themselves.

Calling out bad behaviour is important. If it is not called out, then the person thinks they can get away with it and will never learn the proper social codes.

And for those of you who think children just lie, and to those of you who victim blamed, then I think you need to look at how you handle relationships with your children.

Teenagers (children) only lie to a parent if they feel they are not able to express themselves or do not have clear boundaries they negotiated, so they can develop their own sense of self. Negotiated boundaries , which are full of explanations as to why they exist and why they are important, are crucial because imposed boundaries, devoid of explanation, understanding and taking into account all elements of any issue, will simply lead to a child/teenager feeling they have no agency or independent thought which can lead to the most awful situations.

Thank you again to those who posted considered comments. They were useful.

Thanks for the life lesson in how to parent a teen/ be a great parent etc etc!!

But fyi - you are the one that is on here and said that your lawn has been ruined/ house a complete mess/ mud everywhere and kids trying to steal from your house. Doesn't sound like your 16 year old has a very good judge of character to have people like that in her home that would do that type of thing.

My 16 year old has many friends and not one has ever done that or behaved like that in my house.

Ursula82 · 23/01/2023 11:12

I am still hanging on for how the OP “blocked upstairs”? 😂

hryllilegur · 23/01/2023 11:28

Ursula82 · 23/01/2023 11:12

I am still hanging on for how the OP “blocked upstairs”? 😂

I’m thinking the museum style little rope barrier suggested upthread.

Maybe she should have put up a ‘polite notice: keep off the grass’ sign too.

MostlyEatingBiscuits · 23/01/2023 11:35

And a post-it on the shed 'PRIVATE Snogging in Progress'
Garden tools do get in the way rather.

Rhaych2003 · 23/01/2023 11:38

You’re own fault leaving a bunch of teenagers in the house, although you were just trying to be a good parent and trusting your daughter. I think your daughter needs a good chat about why she allowed her friends to disrespect your home. Hope this has been a lesson to daughter on who her true mates are! Welldone to the girls who helped clean the messs

Ursula82 · 23/01/2023 11:40

MostlyEatingBiscuits · 23/01/2023 11:35

And a post-it on the shed 'PRIVATE Snogging in Progress'
Garden tools do get in the way rather.

i love fact that in the Op, the fact the boys “left the shed door open” was listed as one of the appalling things they did 😂

Treetrim · 23/01/2023 11:40

I’m afraid it’s a case of you held the party, you own the consequences. It’s shitty but it could have been worse.

If I was the parent of one of the boys, I wouldn’t take kindly to a message. I would like to think my DC would behave well and would want to hear if there was messing that resulted in damage so I could give my DC a talk around appropriate behaviour. However, I would also think you were unreasonable for expecting to be paid for the damage

MintJulia · 23/01/2023 11:44

AnotherAppleThief · 21/01/2023 10:45

No that's the consequence for allowing a 16th birthday party with 40 teenagers.

This.

And anyway, it's just mud. Wait until it dries and then brush it loose and vacuum it. If that doesn't get it out completely, then shampoo the carpet.

Hard floors should be moppable and as for the lawn, it will grow back in the spring. It's hardly the end of the world. Use it as an opportunity to show your dc how to clean a carpet properly. Make them do it and they will be more careful who they invite next time...and keep the garden door locked.

fUNNYfACE36 · 23/01/2023 11:49

To be fair I would be very unhappy if my 15 year old was invited to an unsupervised mixed party at your house and plied with alcohol
As for your half hour 'checks' , you expect us to believe you made a 20 minute round trip every 30 minutes during your restaurant meal!!!

Thereisnolight · 23/01/2023 11:57

fUNNYfACE36 · 23/01/2023 11:49

To be fair I would be very unhappy if my 15 year old was invited to an unsupervised mixed party at your house and plied with alcohol
As for your half hour 'checks' , you expect us to believe you made a 20 minute round trip every 30 minutes during your restaurant meal!!!

You wouldn’t have to let your 15 go to the party and ply himself with alcohol in that case.

MostlyEatingBiscuits · 23/01/2023 12:02

The naivety is a bit worrying. Sheds are like bloody catnip for hormonal teenagers. Does the OP honestly think that the tools were just dumped on the lawn 'for a laugh' and that was the only shed-related shenanigans?

hryllilegur · 23/01/2023 12:06

Ursula82 · 23/01/2023 11:40

i love fact that in the Op, the fact the boys “left the shed door open” was listed as one of the appalling things they did 😂

And that having read this, loads of posters are aghast at the dreadful behaviour.

yeah, there’s a bit tagged on about alleged attempted theft and doorway picket inspections… but the main issue is that there was a bit of minor messing about in the garden and some mud on the floor.

You almost feel it’s a shame the DD doesn’t play rugby, given how her mother views mud.

hryllilegur · 23/01/2023 12:08

MostlyEatingBiscuits · 23/01/2023 12:02

The naivety is a bit worrying. Sheds are like bloody catnip for hormonal teenagers. Does the OP honestly think that the tools were just dumped on the lawn 'for a laugh' and that was the only shed-related shenanigans?

Not her Nigella!

She a nice girl, don’t you know. Snogging in sheds is not in the boundaries she’s agreed with her mother.

TheaBrandt · 23/01/2023 12:31

Sorry Ursula I have the opposite. The privately educated ones had the worse social skills the state ones were chatty and confident. Also again Anecdotal the random state school lads I didn’t know did far more cleaning up after dds mega party than dds “lovely” friends - witnessed with my own eyes!

wickerhearth · 23/01/2023 12:34

40 unsupervised teenagers is a recipe for disaster op.😮😮🙈

TheaBrandt · 23/01/2023 12:37

Lovely friends were in the main drunk / asleep / sobbing over boyfriend crises

KarmaStar · 23/01/2023 12:41

You went OUT and left the house open for 16 years olds to party ?
sorry but with so much online many parties are gate crashed and you should have been aware of this and taken precautions.
awful behaviour but teens and alcohol are never a good mix.
lesson learnt.
the girls sound brilliant though.

Theblacksheepandme · 23/01/2023 13:14

I think the boys were probably looking for a croquet set in the shed.

YourApplePie · 23/01/2023 13:18

With 40 unsupervised 16-year-olds, you're lucky to have a house left. Rent a Rug Doctor, accept you made a daft mistake.

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