Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That wouldn't fly in my house. I need plans made in advance, confirmed with parents.
The mom sent the text to make driving plans and confirm dinner reservations. There are 4 driving legs to this and a group of 15-20 kids so there has to be some parent coordination.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I'm the host house for a group thing, I say to my kid "you can invite x number of people for x hours on x day and time. Please tell your friends both parents will be home and give them my number to pass on to their parents. They can text me if they need any info or to confirm anything." Generally one or two parents might reach out, especially if it's a late night.
Then I'll work with my kid planning food details and coming up with a shopping list. I ask them for a rough outline of activities so I have a better sense of when they'll likely be in the kitchen vs backyard vs family room etc. Then I'm out of it.
For something like homecoming where they might need rides, the kids coordinate it all and then sometimes parents will text each other just to confirm, but generally the kids do the work.
They are having dinner before the dance and then coming to our house after the dance. The number of people who want to come is higher than the number of people on the dinner reservation.
Anonymous wrote:That wouldn't fly in my house. I need plans made in advance, confirmed with parents.
Anonymous wrote:I refuse to do any of this. This is parent busywork weirdness. My kids have always made their own plans with other kids. All we did when they didn't drive was "can you pick up so and so?"
Anonymous wrote:I refuse to do any of this. This is parent busywork weirdness. My kids have always made their own plans with other kids. All we did when they didn't drive was "can you pick up so and so?"
Anonymous wrote:This year is not my first time experiencing HoCo as a parent and I can totally relate to the chaos!
DD and her friends - all smart, successful, reasonably grounded kids - take care of all the planning. Sounds great, right? Except it's always a total $h1tshow!![]()
It seems to always start out as just a few girls getting ready together, and maybe dinner, before the dance. Then some kids get dates, that don't always have overlapping friend groups, who have already started making their own plans. And then, of course, others kids get invited or ask to join in, in some or all of the festivities, and things just snowball from there.
Every year it's multiple "getting ready" houses/pre-parties, separate public spaces for pictures, dinner before (or maybe after, with apps before?) an afterparty? or maybe a sleepover?... The list goes on and on, with plans made without any regard for proximity or logistics, that are being changed up to and through the very last minute.
In DD's circle, parents don't really get involved and seem perfectly content to be at their kid's beck and call all night as a chauffeur. I'd actually prefer a bit of coordination and encourage DD to help lock-in who's driving who to where, with some limited success.
Anonymous wrote:If I'm the host house for a group thing, I say to my kid "you can invite x number of people for x hours on x day and time. Please tell your friends both parents will be home and give them my number to pass on to their parents. They can text me if they need any info or to confirm anything." Generally one or two parents might reach out, especially if it's a late night.
Then I'll work with my kid planning food details and coming up with a shopping list. I ask them for a rough outline of activities so I have a better sense of when they'll likely be in the kitchen vs backyard vs family room etc. Then I'm out of it.
For something like homecoming where they might need rides, the kids coordinate it all and then sometimes parents will text each other just to confirm, but generally the kids do the work.