Anonymous wrote:Wait, all this for a preschooler? Lady, if you don't tell her it's her birthday, she won't even know. Or she would be thrilled to play balloon volleyball and color in the bath with bath crayons.
You are nuts.
Anonymous wrote:We would not attend an indoor or outdoor birthday party right now.
For my 4 yo's birthday we hired Anna and Elsa to stop by our house. They gave a performance from the sidewalk. We were on the front porch a good distance away. My 4 yo was thrilled by her special guests.
The lady who ran the princess bookings said that her performers usually have acting day jobs and are all really desperate for work right now. Consider supporting the arts.
Anonymous wrote:1 in 1000 Americans have died from COVID. Stop being so selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. We saw my parents masked for Christmas, just two households joining for all of three hours to keep my parents' sanity. We will likely not see them indoors again until April. I certainly would not attend an indoor party.
If you saw your parents indoors for three hours, you attended an indoor party. That is the definition of an indoor party. The purpose of the party or the relationship of those involved is irrelevant in terms of virus transmission. In fact, engaging with higher-risk people, you probably did more damage seeing your parents then if you sent your kid to an indoor party.
Right, but risk is just one thing we factor in when deciding what to do. Seeing isolated elderly people who are huge risk of mental health problems is way more worthy of a small amount of risk, than a preschool birthday party, especially for a kid who goes to preschool and is thus getting all the socialization a child that age needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope. We saw my parents masked for Christmas, just two households joining for all of three hours to keep my parents' sanity. We will likely not see them indoors again until April. I certainly would not attend an indoor party.
If you saw your parents indoors for three hours, you attended an indoor party. That is the definition of an indoor party. The purpose of the party or the relationship of those involved is irrelevant in terms of virus transmission. In fact, engaging with higher-risk people, you probably did more damage seeing your parents then if you sent your kid to an indoor party.
Anonymous wrote:Nope. We saw my parents masked for Christmas, just two households joining for all of three hours to keep my parents' sanity. We will likely not see them indoors again until April. I certainly would not attend an indoor party.