To get the presents, I’m guessing. |
I've had this happen as well and these ladies will swear up and down that they aren't being rude. "Larlo is allowed to choose his own friends" "The athletic boys just naturally gravitate to each other" "If your son is feeling left out maybe you should get a private trainer to help him out with his sports skills. It's all about sports for boys." "I would never let my son be left out. I've always made sure we had tons of friends in our neighborhood and made sure he was on the good sports teams." Basically flip flop so I'm the one who's in the wrong! |
Yes! Why do people do this? My DD was recently invited to a party where around 1/4 of the girls were invited to spend the night after the party. She was sad to not be invited to the sleepover. |
This made me laugh out loud. Years ago I attended a party where a creepy old man dressed up as Dora. How did I know it was a creepy old man, you ask? Because he took off the head in front of all the kids to complain how hot it was. The costume itself was creepy, but headless Dora costume with an old man head was worse. To this day my friends and I joke about Dora the Predatora. |
PP I found a pic of Dora the Predatora. I've never posted a pic so hopefully this works.
https://imgur.com/a/MKiXVh4 |
I think so too for no other reason than the kids were old enough to have their own phone/watch whatever so even if the mom wasn’t called-clearly the kids are old enough to tell the parents what happened regardless if the host parents tried to hide it. Like rushing to take the kids to a laser tag place when the party is over makes no difference-they are going to tell their parents they weren’t actually at the party and didn’t play laser tag. Makes no sense whatsoever. Made up. |
No, it's very real and the a@@holes were angry that my spouse and I showed up at the laser tag place. The only reason they invited my kids is that we are generous in our gift giving. Another fun anecdote about them, they would bankrupt themselves to buy stupid things for their kids. They were not financially secure and are the only adults I've known who have had their phones or electricity cut off. Despite this they spent over $350 on one little plush animal that was in at the time. They would pay a fortune for a McDonald's kid's happy meal toy that was "rare". They were certain these pieces of trash were going to be worth millions. One school night when our youngest kids were in preschool, mom called because they wanted me to buy girl scout cookies so daughter could win a prize. It was after 10pm on a weeknight and our youngest were in preschool. I said I'd buy them the next day but mom explained daughter wanted to win a prize and the deadline was that day. She insisted upon coming over. My husband and kids were already asleep and I had fallen asleep on the couch watching tv. I didn't agree but they showed up at my door. I kept them on the porch and signed up for a few boxes but the daughter said she needed to use the bathroom. I let them in and the daughter sat her butt on my stairs in the foyer and lectured me because, this is the f'ing truth, she need me to buy at least 50 boxes. They would not leave after 10pm at night and kept trying to push me to buy a ridiculous amount of boxes so the daughter could get some crap plastic prize. No I didn't and we avoided them after that until the party fiasco. |
This. We all exchanged gift cards to Target and since I had two invited I always gave a lot more. I was also stupidly generous with their kid because they were such train wrecks financially. |
Again not made up. My kids had phones. The parents didn't give a flip. Our kids were no longer in school together and they thought I was a push over. They didn't expect to have to face me and my spouse. |
This isn't as bad as some of the answers here, but there was a girl in DD's class who would pass out invitations 1-2 days before the party.
These parties would go on for 5-6 hours. They wouldn't do the fun stuff (cake, piñata, opening presents) until the very end so we were stuck the entire time because DD didn't want to miss the best parts. Why didn't I just drop off? This family would literally let 6-7 year old guests ride around on ATVs. Alone. And while their daughter may have been experienced driving them, mine certainly wasn't and I wasn't going to leave her unattended. The cherry on top is because the invitations were such short notice, I didn't have time to get a present. Didn't even have time to swing by Target for a gift card (I'm a working mom and I had to clear things just to be able to attend). To this day, the family complains I didn't bring a gift. Luckily they're now in different social groups so we aren't invited anymore. Her daughter has also developed into quite the mean girl so we're happy to avoid. |
No, your post just makes it even more clear that it's fake - of course the parents were going to find out about it when the kids told the parents they didn't go to laser tags. Nobody is tearing the phone out of your children's hands. Happy meals cost the same regardless of the toy inside. No little girl is going to lecture you to buy 50 boxes of cookies. Just stop, PP, your lies are ridiculous. |
My DD had a classmate this year who gave out handwritten (by the child) invitations on a small piece of paper a day or two before the party. We weren't sure if it was a real invitation or not. We had to text other parents who knew the family better than us to figure out if it was real or not. |
I think we all know who the unhinged parent is in this little story you made up, and it's not the ones you made up. |