| I love the parents of multiple children saying they only do drop offs because they essentially had more children than they could handle and want the free babysitting. Please don't try to drop off your supposedly independent 3 year old. Just decline the invitation if you had more children than you can handle! |
+1. Be very clear |
| We recently had a birthday party for 4 year old DS and not one parent dropped off. The kids can all go to the bathroom and eat cake on their own, but due to the excitement of the party, a few kids got very emotional about silly things and started crying at different points. I would not have wanted to deal with that on my own. Other kids behaved beautifully, and drop off would have been fine. |
+1 I was shocked when we had a party for my 5 year old and a mother dropped off her two children... ages 5 and 3. I WAS SHOCKED. |
+1 I was shocked when we had a party for my 5 year old and a mother dropped off her two children... ages 5 and 3. I WAS SHOCKED. |
| If you do drop off, make sure you are leaving a phone number with the host. At my friend's son's roller skating party, she had some parents just drop their kids off and not even mention that they were leaving...Which is a whole other issue. These were new school friends and she wasn't familiar with the parents. Of course, one of those kids fell and got hurt pretty badly (ended up with a sprained wrist). We had no way to get a hold of the parents. So I (a complete stranger to this kid) spent the whole party icing this boy's wrist and trying to keep him calm. |
| When I was a teenager, I had a party planning business for little kids' parties. A couple friends and I would come and help the parents with the party. Maybe you should hire a babysitter or two, identify which ones don't have parents there, and have them keep an eye on them. |
This is what's wrong with children today. Parents feeling that it's perfectly ok to "drop off" their 3 or 4 year old, to serve the parents convienence! That is APPALLING! And quite UNSAFE! Bless these children, because their "parents" sure aren't "parenting" them
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| DS just turned 5 and we've been to countless parties, hosted many, and no parties have been drop off. What are these 4 yo drop off parties? Many of his friends have older siblings, but it still hasn't been a problem. |
| Obviously, this is an odd year in which some parents do drop offs and some do not. Those of us who have, whether it is because they have an older child or more children, know that there are lots of types of parties in which four year olds can be dropped off. That is the age in which many hosts expect the parents to leave. If you prefer that parents are there, however, say it explicitely. None of these passive-aggressive hints like "snacks for adults will be provided." That is an interesting fact, but does not actually say what you want to convey. And, please, by next year, figure out how to have a party that does not require parents to stay. Have extra parents or make it smaller. Unless it is some special type of party that obviously requires extra supervision (like a pool party), it becomes your responsibility to care fo the kids when you invite them. |
There is a point in every community in which it just starts. Usually someone just starts it and then people follow. It is not a magic number, such as at 4 years 3 months I will be dropping off. But, 4-5 is usually when it starts. I think most of our four year old parties were drop off optional, so about half the parents stayed and half left. |
| OP ask a few friend parents to stay. |
You are kidding, right? You know that today's parents are way more overprotective than the last several generations, right? |
+100 Great time to meet other parents. |
I absolutely agree with this in general, but that isn't what ends up happening. All birthday parties since my children turned 5 have been slumber parties at our house. Should the parents have all stayed the night? Many do stay and have a drink, but then they leave and, if they don't have any other kids, they usually go out. They aren't using me for childcare, but it is the upside to someone inviting your kid somewhere. |