OP here. This is actually 100% my takeaway. Next time I’ll just “forget” to respond to the very last minute. Or just RSVP yes and cancel if necessary. People change RSVP’s on us all the time and it’s no big deal. Lesson learned. Thanks all for the perspective. Going to try to forget about it now. |
I hope you switched up your facts because if you didn't, there will be no next time if the other mother reads this |
|
How old are they? Did she actually just write “no”?
It seems kind of small on the party mom’s part. I’m sure your daughter will be able to find out what they did. She should explain to her friend what happened and she was sorry to miss it. |
Not local. |
I’m sorry for your difficulties. Don’t waste your breath on DCUM, though. These harpies will never, ever think to consider other perspectives, experiences or possibilities. They only see the world through their own limited view. |
I wouldn't do this. It's a jerk move to not RSVP relatively promptly even if a lot of people seem to do this unfortunately. My guess if they have a cousin or something they invited instead that may not show up on the evite and there is some activity-based limit (dinner, spa, whatever). |
That's a selfish and awful takeaway. |
| Op, don’t think you did anything wrong here and agree the mom’s response was puzzling. But it’s her party and it is what it is. |
|
It’s weird that she wasn’t excited about the plans, but not everyone is a “more the merrier” type.
It’s also possible she misread your note and thought people who live in your house were sick and that’s why your visit was cancelled. Even if your daughter felt ok, I would have also said “no, please keep your germs at home”. I think the best thing is for your daughter to make a card for her friend and give it to her friend at school tomorrow and tell her she’s sorry she won’t be there. She can mention that she was supposed to be out of town, but the trip was canceled last minute because the people you were supposed to visit are sick. |
Same situation—sorry for all you are going through, PP. My mind also immediately went to: you just have no idea what else this person is managing, including things that may have arisen since sending the invite that may have her regretting planning a party in the first place. Not everything is about you or about things you know about. Assume that something like this is not. |
| OP, your daughter was invited. You choose to have her decline. You asked if she could come when you changed your plans and were told no. How is this even an issue? Its fine to reach out and ask but you seem pretty entitled to expect them to rearrange everything if they have a specific things planned. |
|
They had a guest limit and reached it. It does not matter why. It could be the food, entertainment, or just the family only wants to deal with x number of kids.
Or once your kid said no, they invited another kid that does not mesh well with yours. Either way, you rsvp-ed no. You have zero right to be upset. |
You sound pretty nasty. They were your back up plan to your plans falling apart. Maybe you are why they said no. |
| I’m surprised she said no - I wouldn’t have done that. But some people are weird. Now you know. |
|
My guess is she saw sick relatives but didn't focus on the details.
I'd have your daughter bring a card to school and explain her situation. |