Anonymous wrote:you can say that currently there is no room but you will let the person know if an invited guest can't come.
This. It's a very diplomatic answer
Or decide to live your life by saying what you mean. "I'm sorry, that won't work for us". More authentic. More genuine. I would respect that.
you can say that currently there is no room but you will let the person know if an invited guest can't come.
This. It's a very diplomatic answer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got asked for the first time if a sibling could come to a drop off party. I said in the invite it's a drop off party - idk if the person missed that (because the person said the spouse had plans and could both kids come). I actually don't know what I am going to respond yet because there is room without sharing for 20 and that's how many people I invited, and I haven't gotten any "no" responses yet.
I guess there is a first for everything![]()
Would you be ok with the sibling being there if there is room? If so, you can say that currently there is no room but you will let the person know if an invited guest can't come.
If you're not ok with it, just say that unfortunately you cannot accommodate this time (but reiterate that it's a drop-off party).
This is the same answer for all of these sibling questions; not sure why it comes up all the time.
This. It's a very diplomatic answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got asked for the first time if a sibling could come to a drop off party. I said in the invite it's a drop off party - idk if the person missed that (because the person said the spouse had plans and could both kids come). I actually don't know what I am going to respond yet because there is room without sharing for 20 and that's how many people I invited, and I haven't gotten any "no" responses yet.
I guess there is a first for everything![]()
Would you be ok with the sibling being there if there is room? If so, you can say that currently there is no room but you will let the person know if an invited guest can't come.
If you're not ok with it, just say that unfortunately you cannot accommodate this time (but reiterate that it's a drop-off party).
This is the same answer for all of these sibling questions; not sure why it comes up all the time.
Anonymous wrote:I got asked for the first time if a sibling could come to a drop off party. I said in the invite it's a drop off party - idk if the person missed that (because the person said the spouse had plans and could both kids come). I actually don't know what I am going to respond yet because there is room without sharing for 20 and that's how many people I invited, and I haven't gotten any "no" responses yet.
I guess there is a first for everything![]()