| At my DD's 3rd birthday party, we did no gifts please, and most people didn't bring one. I would say about 25% did, mostly books. I genuinely prefer no gifts both as a host and a guest. These are upper-middle-class kids who have tons of stuff. |
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No gift parties are the most pretentious ridiculous thing ever.... It's like the parents who brag about having their kids work at a food kitchen and then live in half million dollar house and buy their 16 year old a new car.... Yeah, your kids will understand how fortunate they are and be kind generous souls. Please!! Have a good old fashioned party, have guests bring a gift and if your child isn't a soiled obnoxious brat with too many toys already, they may actually appreciate the kind gesture and we'll wishes of their friends.
If parties were normal and guest lists were reasonable - then parents could send kids to it with 10 gift and actually celebrate the birthday! I'm a child psychologist and can tell |
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.... Continuation of post above....
... I can tell you parents today focus on the most ridiculous things to ground their kids. It's misplaced and unfortunately all too common. That's another story!!! But I take a gift to every party my kids attend. A modest one they help pick out ( if time permits).... And at their parties for their own birthday, they always open the gifts in front of the other kids. They show true appreciation -- not just setting them on table to open later, like it's the guests obligatory " ticket" to the party to leave at table as you arrive! Good luck-- take a gift. Put some thought into it and don't spend too much. A book set for tween or any craft/ art project for little girl. |
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It is surprising to me that a child psychologist thinks that all little girls would like to receive "any craft/art project" as a present. Mine would not.
Also, you sound sort of unpleasant. |
This. It's different than "no gifts, please," which is the definitive way to state that you do NOT want gifts. |
| I would take it as meaning the child has enough toys/gadgets that the parents would prefer your PRESENCE instead of your PRESENTS. |
This! We just did this -- "we appreciate your presence not your presents, we do not have any room for the latter" |
That's dumb, I wouldn't participate in that. |
| We went to a "no gifts please" party for one of my kid's preschool friends and there were a ton of gifts. We didn't bring one. I felt awkward. I did bring a card |
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No gift to BD party is awkward. Although the invitation says so, I think they don't want big gifts taking up their house space or their kid already has ton of them. I would either bring small gift or a gift card with card.
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You must be a delightful person to know. |
I actually find this more tacky than "no gifts". |
| We say "no gifts please" mostly b/c our kids don't need more stuff & we invite their whole class & don't want families to feel like they should buy a gift for people they don't know well. Also, SES varies in school so don't want to put strain on folks. |
| A bit off topic, but we went to a "no gifts, please" party last week and we were the ONLY guests who showed up without a gift. We were the only 'tier 2' guests (not related by blood), so I guess everyone else blew off the parents' request. I felt like an a$$ when I saw the pile of gifts as we handed over our handmade cards. |
I worried a little about this with my child's (age 5) recent birthday party (first year he's had a party with friends). We didn't mention gifts on the invite, and I wondered if people would think we were greedy. As it turned out, 3 of the 4 families brought a gift. |