WHAT? This isn't about you, weirdo. Stop taking things so personally. |
WHAT? No, absolutely not. If this is what you think is true then you have SERIOUS problems. Wow. Just wow. |
Well then your kid has shitty friends. Do better. |
OP here - I live in a suburb in a big house and we've been to both no gift and no mention of gifts parties and it's very rare for people to bring gifts to no gift parties. People follow rules here. Maybe the nasty PPs are private school moms? Really wealthy moms? I have no idea. This type of nasty behavior is not normal in our upper middle class suburb. |
I have never heard of a badger present closet or any type of present closet for that matter. Do people have closets where they stock up on extra gifts to give? This must be a wealthy mom thing. I have a big house, but I don't enough closet space for a badger present closet!! |
Yeah, our parties are huge. All kids (classmates, family, friends, neighbors) and parents and siblings are also invited. Cake, pizza, icecream, mac and cheese, nuggets are served, as well a sumptuous hot meal (usually ethnic) is also served for those who would like something more than cake, pizza etc. We also serve adult beverages for the adults. Finally, we also have some paid entertainment, activity, goody bags, servers, bartenders etc. At least the people from our community will give a card with a gift to the kids. No gifts will just translate to putting a generous check in the card. We will be embarressed to serve only cupcakes at a party. What kind of poor people are posting on DCUM? |
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It’s so weird this is an internet only debate. 75% of the time in my children’s experiences the invite says no gifts. Maybe one or two kids might come with gifts- I think that’s likely because the family missed that it said no gifts.
No one is this judgmental in real life thank god. |
Don't assume it was something I could control. It was a party where the entire class was invited and, unfortunately, her closest friends weren't in her class last year. Instead, we had to deal with a pretty nasty group of mean girls. Not a lot I can do about that. Oddly enough, none of the boys seemed to care, including the birthday kid. Just the girls. Maybe their parents should "do better". |
OP is a clear example that the parents are confused. Read the OP. Apparently gifts that fit on in the envelope with the card are acceptable gifts to a "no-gift" party. You people are confused. |
lol I care way less than how you read my post. But I get it - tone gets lost in these forums. I eye roll and secretly judge no gift invites. But then I adhere to their wishes and move on. To each their own. |
I think the people who insist on gifts are first generation and were raised with a different culture (where gift giving has more meaning) OR were raised poor and therefore feel self-conscious about showing up without a gift. That’s my working theory. |
| If you brought my kid a gift I feel awkward but bringing one. Tink of it like a hostess gift. Thanks so much for inviting... I know you don't need anything. It's not like it's a handout. |
| I put "no gifts" b/c my kids already have way too much stuff, not b/c I don't think your gift is worthy. When people bring a gift, we appreciate it and send a thank you note, but in all honesty, I'd rather they gift a gift towards an experience, like getting ice cream or going to the movies. |
Says who? |
I think you might be onto something with this theory. |