Friendship Over

@eileenleyva (27555)
Philippines
February 26, 2019 2:17am CST
The perks of a mother being friends with her daughters on facebook could be one for the books. At the least, the mother gets to read the comments of their reality friends and, at the most, can suggest something that might help their daughters in their relationships with their reality friends. Such is what happened when I did think one male friend, through his comments, sounded like being interested in my daughter. So, I pried, as naturally as I could. Didn't know my daughter could tell when I was prying. Ha ha ha So she directly asked the guy, when they met for coffee if he has this thing on her. The initial response was that since they were friends, the question is a little awkward. With my daughter, anything in friendship is never awkward. Boom. Friendship Over. And this mother......
9 people like this
7 responses
@JudyEv (382104)
• Rockingham, Australia
26 Feb 19
Oh dear!
1 person likes this
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
Mothers, huh. We need to teach the suitors how to court girls the old-fashion way.
1 person likes this
@JudyEv (382104)
• Rockingham, Australia
27 Feb 19
@eileenleyva Yes, I think you are right.
1 person likes this
@cherigucchi (15932)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
I am friends with my two girls but not with my little boy! I keep on wondering why?
1 person likes this
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
28 Feb 19
That happens. Seems like nobody wants to be called Mama's boy. But in secret, these boys love to hug Mama always, ha ha.
@rakski (156506)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
I think I will be like you soon. I have a growing girl soon....
1 person likes this
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
Don't comment on your girl much. Just Like or Heart or Laugh or Wow. Support is the name of the game. Children are wary about our comments but wait for our approval. If something disappoints you, speak to your daughter. Never reprimand on facebook. Have fun.
@Hannihar (130150)
• Israel
26 Feb 19
@eileenleyva You mean your prying eyes broke up their friendship?
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
No, that is not what I meant.
1 person likes this
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
28 Feb 19
@Hannihar It's in the story. That is just what happened.,
1 person likes this
@Hannihar (130150)
• Israel
27 Feb 19
@eileenleyva I am sorry i misunderstood. Can you explain if you want what you meant then?
@janethwayne (5191)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
Me and my mom are friends in Facebook.And me and my daughters are too.
1 person likes this
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
That's good. Just stay cautious and do not divulge all the family secrets.
@fluffy69 (4955)
26 Feb 19
Ouch! Lol
1 person likes this
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
Why Ouch? You were deleted, too?
@Nevena83 (66063)
• Serbia
26 Feb 19
I do not have a social network, and I think it just distanced people from one another.
@eileenleyva (27555)
• Philippines
26 Feb 19
There could be truth in that statement. While people view their friends on timeline, that also made them envious and lax as friends.
1 person likes this
@Nevena83 (66063)
• Serbia
27 Feb 19
@eileenleyva You're right. People started showing the right face. All that you should never tell someone in the face, they speak through social networks.
1 person likes this