Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless they decide they want a joint party, two parties. Each kid gets their own party.
Yep. But we don’t throw lavish events - cupcakes from a box, a Costco thing of chips, and a playground = party.
Ugh. I hate those parties. Especially the ones like that where you are expected to bring a gift.
+ 1. I’m sorry, PP, but I really hate those parties too unless it’s absolutely a no gift party.
DP but what's wrong with that kind of a party? What does a gift have to do with the type of party thrown?
It’s a gift-grab. My kids go to that park twice a week and having cupcakes there isn’t special or worthy of the parents spending $25 bucks for a gift.
Anonymous wrote:Anticipating when covid is over.
If you have kids with birthday a couple weeks apart, do you alternate party years between the two. Obviously we’ll have family parties every year but I mean the entire class, family friend, neighbors party? One year is his year for a big party and the next year is hers?
My kids birthdays are 5/2 and 5/14.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless they decide they want a joint party, two parties. Each kid gets their own party.
Yep. But we don’t throw lavish events - cupcakes from a box, a Costco thing of chips, and a playground = party.
Ugh. I hate those parties. Especially the ones like that where you are expected to bring a gift.
+ 1. I’m sorry, PP, but I really hate those parties too unless it’s absolutely a no gift party.
DP but what's wrong with that kind of a party? What does a gift have to do with the type of party thrown?
Anonymous wrote:Alternating sounds terrible. It would be so hard for one kid to see the other get a big party and not have the same. A year is a super long time for little kids and their horizon is very immediate. Honestly a year is a long time for an n adult!
Mine are close together and Xmas too so it's a lot but the rest of the year there isn't that much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless they decide they want a joint party, two parties. Each kid gets their own party.
Yep. But we don’t throw lavish events - cupcakes from a box, a Costco thing of chips, and a playground = party.
Ugh. I hate those parties. Especially the ones like that where you are expected to bring a gift.
+ 1. I’m sorry, PP, but I really hate those parties too unless it’s absolutely a no gift party.
Anonymous wrote:I am confused, if you only want to throw one party a year, why would you not make it a joint party? Why is one kid left out? Are we talking like massive parties with a budget on par with a wedding or something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless they decide they want a joint party, two parties. Each kid gets their own party.
Yep. But we don’t throw lavish events - cupcakes from a box, a Costco thing of chips, and a playground = party.
Ugh. I hate those parties. Especially the ones like that where you are expected to bring a gift.
Anonymous wrote:If my kids were born within a few weeks of each other, we would do alternating year parties. We may even start that anyway. We have so many young aunts, uncles, Godparents, family friends and out-of-town grandparents that it a real burden to expect them to show up at two kid parties that close together. We do pretty expensive parties with entertainment and kid and great adult food.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, we alternate years. There are just too many people who would have to go to both parties. This year (covid permitting) our six year old will get the party and our four year old will get the birthday Disneyland trip (we’re in California) with us, sibling, nanny and local grandparents. We do this every year. When they grow out of Disneyland, we’ll find another birthday vacation for the kid with the non-party year.
sameAnonymous wrote:Unless they decide they want a joint party, two parties. Each kid gets their own party.