Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, please gather up and lock up all the alcohol now. Sounds like there may be a reason the kids want your house to be the party house.
Op here. This is not a party.
Anonymous wrote:This year is not my first time experiencing HoCo as a parent and I can totally relate to the chaos!
DD and her friends - all smart, successful, reasonably grounded kids - take care of all the planning. Sounds great, right? Except it's always a total $h1tshow!![]()
It seems to always start out as just a few girls getting ready together, and maybe dinner, before the dance. Then some kids get dates, that don't always have overlapping friend groups, who have already started making their own plans. And then, of course, others kids get invited or ask to join in, in some or all of the festivities, and things just snowball from there.
Every year it's multiple "getting ready" houses/pre-parties, separate public spaces for pictures, dinner before (or maybe after, with apps before?) an afterparty? or maybe a sleepover?... The list goes on and on, with plans made without any regard for proximity or logistics, that are being changed up to and through the very last minute.
In DD's circle, parents don't really get involved and seem perfectly content to be at their kid's beck and call all night as a chauffeur. I'd actually prefer a bit of coordination and encourage DD to help lock-in who's driving who to where, with some limited success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, please gather up and lock up all the alcohol now. Sounds like there may be a reason the kids want your house to be the party house.
Op here. This is not a party.
Anonymous wrote:OP, please gather up and lock up all the alcohol now. Sounds like there may be a reason the kids want your house to be the party house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That wouldn't fly in my house. I need plans made in advance, confirmed with parents.
The mom sent the text to make driving plans and confirm dinner reservations. There are 4 driving legs to this and a group of 15-20 kids so there has to be some parent coordination.
America has become such a weird place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That wouldn't fly in my house. I need plans made in advance, confirmed with parents.
The mom sent the text to make driving plans and confirm dinner reservations. There are 4 driving legs to this and a group of 15-20 kids so there has to be some parent coordination.
America has become such a weird place.
Op here. This is new to me. I was at the high school and this dance seems to be a big cause of stress to the kids and parents who don’t have plans.
My kid has a core group of 5 friends. Those friends have friends. Some have dates and then those dates have their own group.
I’m worried there is going to be a lot more people at my house than I am expecting. We have a large basement, family room. When my kids friends come over, they usually hang out in kids bedrooms, basement or family room if Dh and I are upstairs.
We have alcohol in many places in our house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That wouldn't fly in my house. I need plans made in advance, confirmed with parents.
The mom sent the text to make driving plans and confirm dinner reservations. There are 4 driving legs to this and a group of 15-20 kids so there has to be some parent coordination.
America has become such a weird place.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you should seriously consider your own motivation - for why it would occur to you -- to make a group text --- of parents??
Just guard against injecting yourself (or any parent should) where they don't belong.
It's messy. It's like heading cats. But it is up to the kids to arrange (and close to fail at this)