Anonymous wrote:As an introvert, I fully endorse his plan and would support it. That said, I don't see how it's necessarily more expensive, assuming these parties are low-key. Five BBQs for five people doesn't cost significantly more than one BBQ for 25, assuming you're going with hot dogs, burgers, chips, soda, and cupcakes. Same with pizza or a meal out - the scale on cost is pretty linear. I would veto spending a lot on decorations or such multiple times, but then we don't do that anyway, so it wouldn't be an issue for us. As others have said, though, you can also give him a budget and let him work it out.
He can skip the parties or celebrations with his teammates. I don’t think that’s normal at that age, unless they organize something themselves.
Anonymous wrote:We bought a cheap griddle for 50 bucks and allowed our son to cook in our back yard with with 2 groups of friends not 5 though. his theme was fried rice and each friend bought a vegetable (we provide the meat). They had fun chopping it off, and made a tic toc video. It was really popular at their school. He then had another one with pancakes theme and each friend bought stuff idea, you get the idea.
As an introvert, I fully endorse his plan and would support it. That said, I don't see how it's necessarily more expensive, assuming these parties are low-key. Five BBQs for five people doesn't cost significantly more than one BBQ for 25, assuming you're going with hot dogs, burgers, chips, soda, and cupcakes. Same with pizza or a meal out - the scale on cost is pretty linear. I would veto spending a lot on decorations or such multiple times, but then we don't do that anyway, so it wouldn't be an issue for us. As others have said, though, you can also give him a budget and let him work it out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My teens have multiple parties spread through the week. .
Party 1 - Tiny birthday cake or dessert at midnight. everyone in PJs and the birthday kid/adult gets hugs and kisses. They get 1K from us.
Party 2 - All the family go for a dinner at a fancy restaurant (around 15 people) . Food, drinks, the works. He gets some cash gifts from older relatives.
Party 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 - he is treating all his different groups of friends to movies, dinners, lunches, trips, activities etc. some modest cash gifts. Usually between $25 - $50, but mostly just birthday cards etc.
some groups treat him to a meal. That is their tradition. I really like that.
You give each of your kids $1k cash each year for non-milestone birthdays? Are they required to save any of that or is it all for spending?
My DS didn't get that much -- total, from all sources -- for his bar mitzvah.
Yup. $1K cash each year for each kid. And the birthday celebrations last a week. They can spend it, they can save it. They have never been given any allowance either (we pay for everything). If I give allowance then it will work out roughly to the same amount annually.
My kids are pretty miserly about spending money on themselves and have very simple taste. Friends are also low key. They have actually a very good nest egg. Birthday and Christmas are two times when they get cash and one or two big ticket gifts of their choosing.
The more you write, I still can’t tell if it’s a joke. It’s so over the top and beyond what many of us do. 1k cash and one or two big ticket gifts for a birthday? Amazing. My daughter got AirPods as her big ticket Christmas gift. No cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My teens have multiple parties spread through the week. .
Party 1 - Tiny birthday cake or dessert at midnight. everyone in PJs and the birthday kid/adult gets hugs and kisses. They get 1K from us.
Party 2 - All the family go for a dinner at a fancy restaurant (around 15 people) . Food, drinks, the works. He gets some cash gifts from older relatives.
Party 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 - he is treating all his different groups of friends to movies, dinners, lunches, trips, activities etc. some modest cash gifts. Usually between $25 - $50, but mostly just birthday cards etc.
some groups treat him to a meal. That is their tradition. I really like that.
You give each of your kids $1k cash each year for non-milestone birthdays? Are they required to save any of that or is it all for spending?
My DS didn't get that much -- total, from all sources -- for his bar mitzvah.
Yup. $1K cash each year for each kid. And the birthday celebrations last a week. They can spend it, they can save it. They have never been given any allowance either (we pay for everything). If I give allowance then it will work out roughly to the same amount annually.
My kids are pretty miserly about spending money on themselves and have very simple taste. Friends are also low key. They have actually a very good nest egg. Birthday and Christmas are two times when they get cash and one or two big ticket gifts of their choosing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My teens have multiple parties spread through the week. .
Party 1 - Tiny birthday cake or dessert at midnight. everyone in PJs and the birthday kid/adult gets hugs and kisses. They get 1K from us.
Party 2 - All the family go for a dinner at a fancy restaurant (around 15 people) . Food, drinks, the works. He gets some cash gifts from older relatives.
Party 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 - he is treating all his different groups of friends to movies, dinners, lunches, trips, activities etc. some modest cash gifts. Usually between $25 - $50, but mostly just birthday cards etc.
some groups treat him to a meal. That is their tradition. I really like that.
You give each of your kids $1k cash each year for non-milestone birthdays? Are they required to save any of that or is it all for spending?
My DS didn't get that much -- total, from all sources -- for his bar mitzvah.
Yup. $1K cash each year for each kid. And the birthday celebrations last a week. They can spend it, they can save it. They have never been given any allowance either (we pay for everything). If I give allowance then it will work out roughly to the same amount annually.
My kids are pretty miserly about spending money on themselves and have very simple taste. Friends are also low key. They have actually a very good nest egg. Birthday and Christmas are two times when they get cash and one or two big ticket gifts of their choosing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My teens have multiple parties spread through the week. .
Party 1 - Tiny birthday cake or dessert at midnight. everyone in PJs and the birthday kid/adult gets hugs and kisses. They get 1K from us.
Party 2 - All the family go for a dinner at a fancy restaurant (around 15 people) . Food, drinks, the works. He gets some cash gifts from older relatives.
Party 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 - he is treating all his different groups of friends to movies, dinners, lunches, trips, activities etc. some modest cash gifts. Usually between $25 - $50, but mostly just birthday cards etc.
some groups treat him to a meal. That is their tradition. I really like that.
You give each of your kids $1k cash each year for non-milestone birthdays? Are they required to save any of that or is it all for spending?
My DS didn't get that much -- total, from all sources -- for his bar mitzvah.