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Invite your friend, and their kid.
Large venue. Cannot after the fact make up the "small party" excuse. Ladies on this board learn toward exclusionary. You know that. Next year, when it's the small place, take this up then. |
I would invite both the mom and the kid. |
And bit by bit, this is how the SN kids get left behind. OP, be true to your friend. If it's a huge venue, kid+mom might have a nice time. The birthday invites will slow to a trickle. IMO, this will alter your friendship if you pass for no really good reason, other than the exclusionary crowd telling you to do so. |
| Inclusive and kindness does not mean that everybody gets included in everything. Relationships change overtime and OP needs to accept that just because she is great friends with the adults doesn’t mean that the kids have great affinity for one another, for whatever reason. You can teach and model inclusivity without your kid having to sacrifice their comfort at their birthday party. Because that is exactly what OP would be asking of her kid. Not just that they invite the person, but then be sure to include and make them comfortable at the party. Otherwise, the kid is going to be lonely at the party which is just the same as not being invited. |
Yeah, all the bad stuff about OP's daughter is just OP speculating. Sometimes kids just don't click, just like adults sometimes don't click. If you want to invite this kid, go ahead, you're paying, but its kind of odd that you're so invested in your daughter being friends with her. |
| You may call it urging but everyone here sees it for what it is and it's guilt tripping. If you want to be that mom that your daughter or son does not feel comfortable coming to to share their own opinions because they may differ from yours then continue right ahead down this path. I can tell you where it leads..... So can my mom. And it's not a great relationship as adults or as teenagers. |
Notice how you say you want to invite the family friend. Do it. Why do you keep dragging your kid into this?. Ask your kid and they do not want this friend there. Trying to make them feel badly about feeling that way. You set them up. If you want them there and that's the only answer you will accept then just do it and move on. Pages do you need on this thread?. |
| Hey OP, why don't you throw your own party for yourself and invite this kid if this kid is so amazing. |
| I would invite the friend. It sounds like this is more a of a family type relationship then you trying to force your daughter to be friends with this girl. Since there is plenty of space and you're not sacrificing her guest list to include an additional person then include her. If this was a sleepover or a small party I would say no. |
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This is a tough one. I talked my son into inviting a particular boy to his 11th bday party - other kid always invites DS to his parties, they play together at after care, last summer this boy was his only friend at day camp. But ds was resistant to inviting him because he wasn't sure how other kid would fit in. Sometimes he's annoying and doesn't play the same video games. I reminded DS that 1) reciprocating the invitation is the right thing to do, and 2) who cares if he annoys the other boys , that's their problem. I told DS that if anyone complains, tell them "Larlo is my friend, it's MY party, so be nice to him." DS invited him and told me he was glad he did because it made other kid really happy.
Well at the party Larlo blurted out something that really hurt ds's feelings. Like, actually made him cry at his own party. And I kicked myself for convincing DS to invite him. |
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Oh, OP, at least be honest. You’re not going to be happy if friend’s kid hangs out with you at the party. You expect your daughter to invite her and entertain her, so you might as well use your words and explain that to her.
I think there is a difference between being nice to someone coming to your house because their parents are visiting yours, and inviting that person to what should be “your” day (and I say that as someone who is not a birthday person). If you were making her invite cousins and neighbours, that’s one thing. To single this other child out as an invite, and as a project, isn’t fair to your daughter or the other girl. |
You should kick yourself. Kids have their own relationships and you should respect those. |
No need to instruct me, I already kicked myself. But to op, my point is, my son's gut instinct was that this kid wouldn't do well at the party. And my mom instinct was "be inclusive, what could go wrong?" And I learned that sometimes" doing the right thing " is not so black and white. Op, it would be helpful to talk to your child to get a deeper understanding of why she doesn't want the girl at the party. |
| I would invite the friend. |
At some point, yes, but a 10 year old at a venue party is not that time. OP, invite them. A 10 year old does not get to make this decision for the family. It's fine. |