| wow this thread was highly entertaining and honestly i feel sad for op's relative and the mother. the pseudo bridal shower reeks of tackiness and loneliness. op, did people actually buy her gifts off the registry?? |
awesome. |
| It's obvious she wanted to pretend she was having a bridal shower. Let me guess, did she wear a little white sundress to open the presents? |
| Oh wow. Yeah, extremely tacky. |
| this thread makes me sick. i'm single and never had a wedding. i adopted and never had a baby shower. i set myself up and have carried us our whole lives, solo. i will plan a huge 50th blowout and you can be damn sure i will register and i will say why on the invite in case anyone thinks it's tacky. i have my house needs but i will think of something cause i should be celebrated too!!! |
you make me sad. |
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I have a single friend who is almost 50 and has been to so many people's weddings, and she's often been a bridesmaid. I was actually wishing she'd have some kind of party for herself where people could get her those kinds of gifts. It does just seem a little unfair to me that just because she hasn't met a man, she doesn't get the same start on a household.
I don't think she'll ever do this (for one thing, it means giving up on the idea of meeting someone she can marry, and I know she's still hopeful!) but I rather wish she would. (Maybe not at a housewarming, but at another kind of party, just celebrating her.) |
| Register, no. Accept gifts & have a party, yes. If people ask you could tell them exactly what you need. All of this IF these parties have ever been done in your circle of friends. I think you being single actually makes you the better candidate. |
i think it's good that your friend won't ever have that party for herself, b/c that shows she has class and the sense to know that it's tacky to host ANYTHING for yourself with the expectation of gifts. i think it would be a great idea for you and a group of friends to throw that party for her... |
throwing your own bday party, registering for it, putting it on the invitation, and believing that you deserve to be celebrated? how many words for tacky can i use? also, what does it say about you that not a friend or even family member had a baby shower for you? |
+1 |
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Tacky. Tacky tacky tacky.
If people want to bring you gifts, sure, that's nice of them. But to create a registry means you are demanding a gift and that is not cute once you get to be older than 3. But then I think wedding registries and baby registries are tacky too - never had the latter and was forced into the former by my MIL and made it as small as I could without creating a permanent family feud (and also only let people know who specifically asked about it). I don't think people should be mandated to pay for the privilege of hanging out with me, special occasion or not. If they want to bring something, sure and thank you. But a registry smacks of entitlement and demand. |
precisely |
| I agree with you OP, your relative was tacky. I once got invited to a "housewarming" by a coworker and I brought a gift card. Little did I know she used her "housewarming" as an excuse to have a Pampered Chef party. Sooooooo tacky. I would not have gone had I known, let alone given her a gift card. We all felt like we had to buy something to keep workplace harmony, but I thought less of her. |
| Yes. Housewarming parties (expecting gifts) is tacky no matter who throws it. |