Anonymous wrote:Please go and participate in what you can, and as suggested above, make an appearance when its not a kid-appropriate event and then just go and enjoy yourselves doing something else.
My dad was diagnosed with ALS when he was 76 and was gone before he turned 79, so be there while you can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go. Skip the conferences and go to the receptions afterwards. Then your DH can hang with the kids while you attend the dinners (maybe the kids can take a late nap and then attend the cocktail hours of the dinners). Sometimes it's important to put in face time.
This, and if you have to bring the kids to the dinner, bring lots of new bribe toys and ipads/gadgets to entertain them.
Seriously? Kids should be able to interact politely in adult settings without bringing along iPads and being bribed.
Anonymous wrote:How old are your kids? I went to receptions and dinners with my parents starting when I was five. Really your kids should be able to do these things unless they are preschoolers or younger.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go. Skip the conferences and go to the receptions afterwards. Then your DH can hang with the kids while you attend the dinners (maybe the kids can take a late nap and then attend the cocktail hours of the dinners). Sometimes it's important to put in face time.
This, and if you have to bring the kids to the dinner, bring lots of new bribe toys and ipads/gadgets to entertain them.
Anonymous wrote:Go. Skip the conferences and go to the receptions afterwards. Then your DH can hang with the kids while you attend the dinners (maybe the kids can take a late nap and then attend the cocktail hours of the dinners). Sometimes it's important to put in face time.