Anonymous wrote:DH here. My DW is turning 50 in a year and I’m already stressing about what to do.
She is the most anti-party no-gift person, but this is 50!
You have every right to feel down.
Anonymous wrote:My mom celebrated one of her milestone birthdays for a full year. So she made extra fancy dinner plans and took a few extra trips to visit people in celebration of her birthday. It took the pressure off one day and one person being the celebration.
I don’t think anyone would advise getting your birthday cheer from a teenager…
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I was asked "do you want a party?" (a week ago). I said, "oh, no, I don't want anything big."
I didn't say that I wanted my 50th birthday to pass with the only acknowledgment from my husband or kids being be a piece of pie that my husband bought at Lidl at 10am when he bought groceries for the week. The friends stoping by were unplanned. They texted 10 minutes before and said "can we stop by?" That was lovely.
I didn't plan a dinner because that honestly wasn't necessary but it now seems like something I can do to salvage the situation and make myself feel better. I would have been happy with cards, notes, a gift, a plant, a walk as a family, a lunch, a dinner, or even a piece of pie if all of my kids were present.
I just felt overlooked on my 50th. I am grateful to have reached 50 and I am grateful for friends who texted and parents who are alive and many other things.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
I was asked "do you want a party?" (a week ago). I said, "oh, no, I don't want anything big."
I didn't say that I wanted my 50th birthday to pass with the only acknowledgment from my husband or kids being be a piece of pie that my husband bought at Lidl at 10am when he bought groceries for the week. The friends stoping by were unplanned. They texted 10 minutes before and said "can we stop by?" That was lovely.
I didn't plan a dinner because that honestly wasn't necessary but it now seems like something I can do to salvage the situation and make myself feel better. I would have been happy with cards, notes, a gift, a plant, a walk as a family, a lunch, a dinner, or even a piece of pie if all of my kids were present.
I just felt overlooked on my 50th. I am grateful to have reached 50 and I am grateful for friends who texted and parents who are alive and many other things.
Anonymous wrote:Hmmm. A week ago? That's not enough time to plan for an event like this. Since you claim that is not your style, I would say you got what you asked for.
Also, be happy. You were surrounded by loved ones on a chill afternoon, sharing a special day with those who really matter. I think that is indeed special.
Anonymous wrote:DH here. My DW is turning 50 in a year and I’m already stressing about what to do.
She is the most anti-party no-gift person, but this is 50!
You have every right to feel down.
Anonymous wrote:I turned 50 this weekend. My husband asked a week ago if I wanted a party or a gathering and I said no as that is not my style. So he bought me a pie at the grocery store. We said down with the 2 of 3 teenagers who were home at the time and I had a piece of pie. We had two friends stop by and they shared the pie with us.
That was it. No cards, gifts, etc except my parents sent me a card. Many friends checked in by text and phone.
I think I messed up because I didn't specify to my husband that I would have liked a gift or for my teenagers to acknowledge my birthday.
No, I didn't want a party but I also didn't want it to just be ignored.
Sometimes it's exhausting to have to plan everything but I know I have little room to complain if I didn't specify what it was that I wanted. So I have no real grounds to be hurt.
I'm 50 years old. Whew. Today is a new day.