| That's strange! I do think it's weird that some people have gone back to blowing out candles on a cake though, it's pretty gross. Most people I know do cupcakes or if they have a cake, they have the birthday child blow out a candle on a cupcake to avoid spreading germs. |
| That’s so weird it makes me wonder if it’s was an oversight somehow. And I can’t believe the kids didn’t ask???? |
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Wow if my kid was at that party like that at age 4 she would be loudly asking when they get to have cake and would be upset if we left without cake. I'd probably wind up agreeing to buy her a cupcake on the way home just to get her out of there because her association is that birthday=cake, so attending a birthday party and seeing a cake but not being served any would be very hard for her to deal with at age 4.
By age 7 or 8 we'd be able to get her out of there without a problem but we'd be hearing about it for weeks. "Why do you think Joey's parents had that cake and didn't serve it? Do you think that was a fake cake? Do you think the cake tasted bad and that's why they didn't serve it? Will we be serving cake at my birthday because if not I don't want to have a party. Do you think Billy's birthday party next week will have cake and will they serve it and how big will the pieces be and can I have two pieces of cake since I didn't have any cake at Joey's party last month?" I have to assume these people have no other children. |
I am certain kids asked. No way that a group of 4 year olds watched another kid blow out candles on a cake and then asked no follow up questions when the cake disappeared and none was offered. One or 2 year olds, okay, they don't know what's going on. Four year olds are like treat detectors. Once when my kid was 4, I unwrapped a lozenge in the front seat of our car and she interrogated me for the next 15 minutes about what I was having and why she couldn't have some. She accurately identified the flavor of the lozenge as lemon from the backseat. She could hear a foil wrapper rip from another floor of the house. She could smell chocolate on someone's breath if it had been consumed even an hour before. |
I don't know anyone who knows the answer for sure, but you do! |
It is strange but your kid is rude and you need to teach them manners. |
Your explanation makes no sense. They are grown adults who have had birthday parties themselves and gone to many. Nothing happens when children eat a piece of cake. And if they have a problem with sugar or whatever the latest scary ingredient then make something else that everyone can eat. That’s just some rude hostessing. And why were there so many adults there? |
Ruder to present a cake without serving it to the guests. |
Calm down pokie. You don’t know her child. At 7 years old the kids would be asking the birthday kid. So would a handful of four year olds. |
Huh? My kid is in first grade. Every single birthday party they've attended has had one or both parents of each child stay for the entire party. |
| Weird AF. |
Have you been to a party for that age group? There are 1-2 parents per kid at the party. |
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That’s weird. Seems like a food control thing.
We haven’t served cake at my kid’s last two birthdays because she doesn’t like it. She wanted donuts instead. I had at least one kid ask, “where’s the cake?!” which made me feel bad— but the birthday girl didn’t want it! And we had plenty of other sugar, ha. |
Ha ha! Sounds like my daughter at the same age. They're little bloodhounds. |
| Weird |