Anonymous wrote:OP, trust me—your BBQ was just fine. Thank you for hosting! People are often so self-conscious and nervous about hosting that most of your guests were probably in awe that you pulled it off at all.
I've been married for 35 years, and I'm now considered an excellent hostess. That said, I still get stressed when I host. Over the years, I've learned a lot from the many less-than-perfect parties (IMO) I've thrown. The good news? No one remembers the “bummer” ones.
After decades of hosting, I’ve picked up a few tricks I’d love to share with you:
I keep an Excel file to track each party I host. I note:
- Guest list: Who was invited, who declined, who accepted but didn’t show.
- Menu: What I made, what I bought, quantities, what was popular, and what wasn’t a hit.
- Invite: How far in advance I invited guests. Did I call them? Text them? Use an E-Vite? I also note whether I sent a reminder with details like the address and time of the party.
This helps me plan better for future gatherings—what worked, what didn’t, and who really loves that one dish I always forget about until it’s too late! You did great. Hosting takes courage and practice. Every event is a step closer to effortless entertaining. Keep going—you’re already ahead of the game just by trying.
Anonymous wrote:Invited some new neighborhood-parent friends over, and everyone left by 8:15pm. Stilted conversation. I drank too much and blabbed about idiotic things to keep the conversation alive. My house is dumpy and I'm dumpy and I feel like a lump of nothing. Kids played but the adults all talked to one another while I tried to keep up and failed and I can see into the yard of one of the family's houses and it looks like a couple of the families just headed over there.
Anonymous wrote:Next time, don’t drink so much and blab.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good on you for trying 👍
Agree! Many of us are too intimidated to host.
Anonymous wrote:You tried and that effort matters a lot. Barely anyone tries.
I wouldn't be offended that a pair ended up in another yard. They probably sensed your party was winding down and wanted to continue a conversation or show someone something at their house and kept talking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Invited some new neighborhood-parent friends over, and everyone left by 8:15pm. Stilted conversation. I drank too much and blabbed about idiotic things to keep the conversation alive. My house is dumpy and I'm dumpy and I feel like a lump of nothing. Kids played but the adults all talked to one another while I tried to keep up and failed and I can see into the yard of one of the family's houses and it looks like a couple of the families just headed over there.
I read this exact novel last summer!
Anonymous wrote:Invited some new neighborhood-parent friends over, and everyone left by 8:15pm. Stilted conversation. I drank too much and blabbed about idiotic things to keep the conversation alive. My house is dumpy and I'm dumpy and I feel like a lump of nothing. Kids played but the adults all talked to one another while I tried to keep up and failed and I can see into the yard of one of the family's houses and it looks like a couple of the families just headed over there.