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9 year old FOMO- extreme reactions

7 replies

helz879 · 11/01/2026 14:43

Hi everyone,
I’m hoping for some advice or shared experiences please. It’s a long one- Sorry!!!

My son is 9 and really struggles with extreme FOMO, particularly when it involves his friends. If he thinks his friends are doing something without him (or hears about it after), he takes it very personally and becomes extremely upset. It feels much deeper than “normal disappointment”.

An example that happened yesterday he went to play golf with his dad (my ex partner but still very close!). Golf isn’t his thing, football is his absolute life, but he went because his dad loves it and I think he can enjoy it. When they arrived, his dad received a voice note from a friend saying that he and his sons (who are my son’s best friends) were heading to the local park to play football. As soon as my son heard this, he didn’t want to play golf anymore and desperately wanted to go and join them. Apparently it escalated into an argument, and they then sat in silence all the way home (which breaks my heart).

Another recent example which I’m still really embarrassed about. His friends mentioned that they’d been to his favourite café without him. When I picked him up from school and we bumped into one of the mums (who we’re very close to), my son immediately said to her that he knew they’d gone, the moment he came out of school and saw her. I was honestly mortified, and it showed me how much mental energy he puts into tracking what he might have missed out on. But he also came across as extremely rude. I pulled him on this big time in the car and he lost the plot and was hysterical crying seeing a completely different tone and delivery to his message than I did.

I do try to talk things through with him calmly. We explain that we can’t always be included in everything our friends do, and that friends are allowed to do things without us- an emphasis on the freedom of others, it isn’t an attack on him, it doesn’t mean he’s being excluded, and it doesn’t change how much they care about him. We explain that this is just part of life. But emotionally, he really struggles to accept this, even when he understands it logically.

He’s an only child, and I do wonder if that plays a role. I also have diagnosed ADHD, and he shows EVERY trait but school don’t feel he presents that way at all, so I’m a bit stuck in limbo at the moment.

I’m really worried about how deeply he feels these things and how hard it is for him to regulate himself when they happen. It often comes out as snappiness or defensiveness rather than sadness, and actually rude sometimes and I don’t want him growing up feeling constantly rejected or on edge socially. He is a really lovely, kind boy he’s popular with amazing manners and a heart of gold but he’s his own worst enemy at the moment.

Thanks so much for reading this far- It’s upsetting me as I this as I realise this is exactly how I felt in my twenty’s when I also felt excluded from social events! Arghh! I would love any help!
Thank you 🩷

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Hungrycaterpillarsmummy · 11/01/2026 22:48

As I was reading your post I was thinking ADHD.
What a shame for him for it to be on his mind so much.
The golf/football thing I can kind of see as a normal reaction but the cafe thing isn't.
Like, compare the scenarios to him to show his day out is the same as his pals
The dad was taking his kid to football, and his dad was taking him to golf. It wasn't a plan devised to leave him out and it sounds like the other family didn't have friends with them either

Arran2024 · 11/01/2026 22:49

Hi. Could you ask school if they could have him seen by speech and language? It isn't just about speech but also social skills, interactions with others. He might need more help in terms of how to express himself.

helz879 · 12/01/2026 17:34

@Arran2024 @Hungrycaterpillarsmummy Thanks so much for your replies. We are doing some work with him on regulating and have come up with some techniques together that may help him! We are also looking at things he can control and things he can’t. 🩷 I really appreciate it x

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Mayflower282 · 12/01/2026 17:37

Does he have regular play dates with other children? He sounds like he is craving time with other kids his age 😢

helz879 · 13/01/2026 11:25

@Mayflower282 ! Hey! We do a lot of sports- his choice. He has swimming club on mondays, football three times a week and tennis (and these are all with his best friends) and weekends have at least one play date! We often go to a cafe with his friends at least once a week too. X

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NerrSnerr · 13/01/2026 11:53

I wonder if he needs a life away from his best friends if school and all his activities are with them. Maybe doing some activities away from them?

My daughter was a little bit like this in primary with a lot of FOMO. She went through a phase of wanting to do the same activities as her close friends but we tried to make sure they all had their ‘own’ thing so they weren’t on top of each other.

She’s now year 7 and has grown out of it now. I think a lot of it was self esteem- worrying that if they did things without her they wouldn’t like her any more but luckily she seems to have worked on that and is much happier and has more self worth.

helz879 · 13/01/2026 12:36

@NerrSnerr Hey! Thanks that’s really helpful. I think your right, I have him on the waitlist for cubs at the moment as I wanted him to move away from sports a little and also the competitiveness as there is also a lot of competition between them as they are all good at sports and do a lot of team sports but also individual events and it has in the past been a bit much. Really lovely that your daughter sounds like she’s thriving. X

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