Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS goes to a small private school where most/all families are doing fine financially and the kids likely get plenty of toys and gifts from parents and extended family on their bdays. In his kindergarten class roughly half to 2/3 the kids have said no presents on their bday invites and the other portion didn't say that.
I always thought I'd be a no gifts parent, the last thing I want in my house is more toys that aren't even necessarily things he wants or need, but he's really into the idea of getting presents from his friends. He's helped pick out what to get the kids that have had gifts and has pondered what friends will pick for him. I haven't yet said either way whether he'll have gifts at his bday party, for the other kids I've explained that some parents feel their kids already have so much stuff that they're just excited to have the friends come for the party.
Is it viewed negatively now if you don't say no gifts? I was surprised by the first couple families that didn't, but that could just be a me-bias because I couldn't imagine wanting a bunch more junk and hadn't yet experienced a kid that was thinking about getting presents from friends at their party.
You're not the one who has to want it -- the presents are for your kids, not YOU. You're clearly already a "no-gifts" person, so why pretend with this post, asking a fake question?
Your kids sound like a lot of fun, too -- not wanting gifts at their birthday party. No kid is "just excited to have their friends come over" unless they're shut-ins the rest of the year. Do your kids get out of the house? At all?
Of course they'd be excited to have presents. They're not dead inside, like middle aged curmudgeons who only think about what a hassle it is FOR THEM if their kids get gifts. How sad for your kids.
Stop forcing kids to be middle aged duds. Let them be kids, excited about getting presents. Then deal with cleaning up after the party, where to put the stuff, what to keep, what to give away, writing a thank you not, and all the REAL reasons you don't want to deal with gifts at your kids' party: lazy selfish parenting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. It’s actually rude to mention gifts on an invitation.
Please stop repeating this. Manners and social norms evolve.
Op, it totally depends on your crowd. In our neighborhood group where all the kids and siblings go to each other's parties, there are just two families out of about 20 who didn't write "no gifts" on their invitations over the last few years. I don't think that was rude, but because it was outside the norm there was a little grumbling among parents at drop off about how they had to do a last minute gift run because they didn't notice that earlier that the invitation was missing the "no gifts" line.
Officially the grumblers were the rude ones, of course, but nonetheless it happened and tbh it was annoying to have to make a trip to get gifts when it wasn't the norm.
One of the two families made a big deal about how they would donate some of the gifts which was also a little weird, but that's another story.
Anonymous wrote:No. It’s actually rude to mention gifts on an invitation.
Anonymous wrote:No. It’s actually rude to mention gifts on an invitation.
Anonymous wrote:DS goes to a small private school where most/all families are doing fine financially and the kids likely get plenty of toys and gifts from parents and extended family on their bdays. In his kindergarten class roughly half to 2/3 the kids have said no presents on their bday invites and the other portion didn't say that.
I always thought I'd be a no gifts parent, the last thing I want in my house is more toys that aren't even necessarily things he wants or need, but he's really into the idea of getting presents from his friends. He's helped pick out what to get the kids that have had gifts and has pondered what friends will pick for him. I haven't yet said either way whether he'll have gifts at his bday party, for the other kids I've explained that some parents feel their kids already have so much stuff that they're just excited to have the friends come for the party.
Is it viewed negatively now if you don't say no gifts? I was surprised by the first couple families that didn't, but that could just be a me-bias because I couldn't imagine wanting a bunch more junk and hadn't yet experienced a kid that was thinking about getting presents from friends at their party.