Anonymous wrote:
At age 6 Larla did not come up with an invitation list alone without going over it with Mom as she did choose for whatever reason not to invite her entire class and also to invite some others in the other section(s) of first grade she had probably known from kindergarten or other activities. At most she was given a number of how many could be at he party and she had to make choices. This also does not mean that Larla will not continue to be thoughtful or have a positive relationship with this young boy. There are certaily were kids that Mom and Dad knew from earlier years in school or activities of Larla that they wanted to be sure were invited and probably one would see there are many more girls than boys on the evite. Young children do talk and do not know boundaries as mentioned. There is no reason to assume that Mom was any more against having X come than Y or Z - not fair to put thoughts into Mom's mind. It is hard when all are not invited at this age, but that is life. Leave it as it is and do not put anyone in an awkward position - the parents over having to add in your child for whatever reason or you son who everyone on the Evite in the class would know was not on the original list and hard to say might assume "pushed - meaning You for him to come." This is not likely to win him other invites, especially if he is not on the top of his game at the party. Nor to help you build positive relationships in the mainstream for your child if you seem to be wearing "the wounded parent medal." And I have been there many years past when a daughter was not included - even recently at a mostly family gathering of the girl she does not most with, BUT it is life.
Anonymous wrote:
At age 6 Larla did not come up with an invitation list alone without going over it with Mom as she did choose for whatever reason not to invite her entire class and also to invite some others in the other section(s) of first grade she had probably known from kindergarten or other activities. At most she was given a number of how many could be at he party and she had to make choices. This also does not mean that Larla will not continue to be thoughtful or have a positive relationship with this young boy. There are certaily were kids that Mom and Dad knew from earlier years in school or activities of Larla that they wanted to be sure were invited and probably one would see there are many more girls than boys on the evite. Young children do talk and do not know boundaries as mentioned. There is no reason to assume that Mom was any more against having X come than Y or Z - not fair to put thoughts into Mom's mind. It is hard when all are not invited at this age, but that is life. Leave it as it is and do not put anyone in an awkward position - the parents over having to add in your child for whatever reason or you son who everyone on the Evite in the class would know was not on the original list and hard to say might assume "pushed - meaning You for him to come." This is not likely to win him other invites, especially if he is not on the top of his game at the party. Nor to help you build positive relationships in the mainstream for your child if you seem to be wearing "the wounded parent medal." And I have been there many years past when a daughter was not included - even recently at a mostly family gathering of the girl she does not most with, BUT it is life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I'd call the mom and say, "Larla has invited my son to her party, but we haven't gotten the details yet."
Yes, I would do it.
Larla is a child. At that age, they blab about everything and have no boundaries. You don't call the mom and invite your child to their party. If she wanted to invite your child, she would have. You put her in an uncomfortable position of either her being forced to invite your child, that she has concerns about, or saying no which makes things worse. Your child was not invited. In life you are not invited to all parties. Its ok.
The uncomfortable position has already been created, and OP didn't create it. She has a child expecting to go to a party because they were verbally invited to it.
Yes, in life you are not invited to all parties, and that's OK. But it's not OK for a child to be told they're invited to a party and then have the invitation withdrawn without explanation. This is the host family's problem to fix -- it was their child that created the awkward situation. The child may not be responsible for fixing it, but the parents are, more than anyone else in this situation.
Parents like you are the reason why some kids don't or soon won't get invited.
Parents send out formal invites not small children. The child was never officially invited. Consequently, the real invitation was not withdrawn. Casual invitations by 1st graders don't count.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I'd call the mom and say, "Larla has invited my son to her party, but we haven't gotten the details yet."
Yes, I would do it.
Larla is a child. At that age, they blab about everything and have no boundaries. You don't call the mom and invite your child to their party. If she wanted to invite your child, she would have. You put her in an uncomfortable position of either her being forced to invite your child, that she has concerns about, or saying no which makes things worse. Your child was not invited. In life you are not invited to all parties. Its ok.
The uncomfortable position has already been created, and OP didn't create it. She has a child expecting to go to a party because they were verbally invited to it.
Yes, in life you are not invited to all parties, and that's OK. But it's not OK for a child to be told they're invited to a party and then have the invitation withdrawn without explanation. This is the host family's problem to fix -- it was their child that created the awkward situation. The child may not be responsible for fixing it, but the parents are, more than anyone else in this situation.
Parents like you are the reason why some kids don't or soon won't get invited.
Parents send out formal invites not small children. The child was never officially invited. Consequently, the real invitation was not withdrawn. Casual invitations by 1st graders don't count.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I'd call the mom and say, "Larla has invited my son to her party, but we haven't gotten the details yet."
Yes, I would do it.
Larla is a child. At that age, they blab about everything and have no boundaries. You don't call the mom and invite your child to their party. If she wanted to invite your child, she would have. You put her in an uncomfortable position of either her being forced to invite your child, that she has concerns about, or saying no which makes things worse. Your child was not invited. In life you are not invited to all parties. Its ok.
The uncomfortable position has already been created, and OP didn't create it. She has a child expecting to go to a party because they were verbally invited to it.
Yes, in life you are not invited to all parties, and that's OK. But it's not OK for a child to be told they're invited to a party and then have the invitation withdrawn without explanation. This is the host family's problem to fix -- it was their child that created the awkward situation. The child may not be responsible for fixing it, but the parents are, more than anyone else in this situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I'd call the mom and say, "Larla has invited my son to her party, but we haven't gotten the details yet."
Yes, I would do it.
Larla is a child. At that age, they blab about everything and have no boundaries. You don't call the mom and invite your child to their party. If she wanted to invite your child, she would have. You put her in an uncomfortable position of either her being forced to invite your child, that she has concerns about, or saying no which makes things worse. Your child was not invited. In life you are not invited to all parties. Its ok.
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
I'd call the mom and say, "Larla has invited my son to her party, but we haven't gotten the details yet."
Yes, I would do it.