| This is very common. My kids are a week apart and I know lots of families with multiple kids a week or two apart. |
| I’d actually recommend having a separate party for each child and simply sucking it up. Our birthday is a time to celebrate an individual, not to share what is most convenient for their parents and extended family. The most important person on a birthday is the individual child. You chose to have three kids, at the same time of year even. Please don’t combine or minimize birthdays. |
| Invite fewer kids and do a combined party. Each kid doesn’t need to invite their whole class. Each kid gets 3-5 friends, and then if family comes it’s one big party for everyone. |
Sounds like a way to create really happy birthday memories, especially the threat of not getting to invite their friends. |
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One combined home party for family.
Then do venue parties for friends/classmates. Combine if you can. Also remember that kids don’t need parties every year. |
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I would do the following (or some combo):
1) Visiting relatives are great, but they need to stay in a hotel unless they are actively helping the whole time they are there. No hosting. 2) SUPER simple parties, which I don’t believe requires limiting the guest list. Either go to a place (bounce house, trampoline park, etc) and let them handle everything or do them at your house and provide pizza store bought cake and an activity or two. No decorations, no goody bags, no food that you make, and don’t make any extra effort to clean the house. However clean it would be on a regular Saturday and spend 1 hr before the party picking up. That’s it. 3) Spreading them out. One kid’s is 3 weeks early, one is roughly on time, one is 3 weeks late. No one cares! I wouldn’t try and combine parties or limit them more than you usually would on number of friends as those are the only things kids care about. |
| I have witnessed parents holding back to back 2 hour parties at the bowling alley for each of their kids. The family was there for hours but all the parties had their own set of friends. |
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Do one family party jointly for all 3 kids.
Do small parties for the individual kids. They can each invite 3-5 friends and you do something then have pizza and go home. |
Or stop having family parties and just have friend parties. Family parties will phase out as they get older anyway. |
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Why do they get literally everything they ask for? They want home parties, they want separate parties, they want big things like bounce houses…do they always get what they want no matter what?
How about having them decide some things but not dictate everything. It’s okay to say no— even on their birthday. I promise. You want separate parties and at home? Okay but then it’s simple pizza and yard games. Oh a bounce house is super important to you? Okay then we are going to a place outside of our house. |
Honestly, the fact that you'd want to schedule individual trips like these for each child for ordinary, non-milestone birthdays is an indication that you're just doing too much. Give your kid a card and a gift, take them out to pizza and call it a day. Every year does not need to be an instagram-worthy celebration. |
| I like the suggestion of having all 3 in one day but at different times 10-12, 1:30-3:30, and 5-7. Then you can just keep the house decorated, the one bouncy house rental, etc - the morning party can either be bagels, fruit and cake or sandwiches, veggie, tray, cake, and then the 1:30-3:30 can be pizza & cupcakes, and the evening party can be be Chik fil a or chipotle and cake. Relatives can all come over once - yes, exhausting but it's all done in one day! You save money on the rentals, decor. You only really have to do deep cleaning, etc! |
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I have 2 kids with b-days a couple of days apart and dread that time of year. I just suck it up and have an exhausting month planning, executing, cleaning up and paying the bills.
At some point they won't require all the effort. Can't wait!! |
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IME, with now teens, the party phase is really not that long. I'd let them each have a party with but spread them out over three weekends. And, do one family celebration for all of them with grandparents etc.
For my kids, the parties got smaller in later elementary school and by middle school evolved into an outing with a few friends. |
+1. This was going to be my advice. Hire a helper for the day if possible, to set up and clean up in between. Take a couple of days off work before and after the weekend. |