Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the bday boy legitmately thought your son had been invited, maybe the invitation got lost in the mail (wrong email address, accidentally left you off, etc.). I would email the parent and apologize for the oversight and suggest a get-together for the boys. It really could have been an honest mistake. If the mom turns you down, then forget about it and move on.
But she told other parents that they declined.
I would tell your son the true as you described. It's always easier to start with the truth, as the other parent will probably soon find out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you--I think you're all right to stick to the facts. I was projecting my own impressions of the boy's mom who last year invited the whole sports team over sans DS.
Ugh, I detest people like this.
Next time you see her you make a point of her having your correct email since two invitations have gone astray,
"Here's my email Larla since I know you're not the kind of person who would exclude anyone."
Anonymous wrote:Thank you--I think you're all right to stick to the facts. I was projecting my own impressions of the boy's mom who last year invited the whole sports team over sans DS.
Oh sorry I didn't read closely. You said the mom said that your kid had turned down the invitation. Okay, just tell him that you never received it. That's the truth.Anonymous wrote:Yes, you can say you didn't get an invitation which is the truth. Maybe one was sent and got lost. Maybe the mom didn't invite your kid. I wouldn't assume it's the latter unless you find out more. But if it turns out to be the latter, I'm not sure about lying to your kid about it. Kids need to learn to deal with this stuff - but, I don't know if 9 is old enough to deal with it.
Anyway, don't manage it. You don't know what happened so don't try to make something up to soothe something over that may not have even happened.
Anonymous wrote:If the bday boy legitmately thought your son had been invited, maybe the invitation got lost in the mail (wrong email address, accidentally left you off, etc.). I would email the parent and apologize for the oversight and suggest a get-together for the boys. It really could have been an honest mistake. If the mom turns you down, then forget about it and move on.