Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I had someone RSVP yes a half hour before my daughter's birthday party.
That's why I stopped using Evite - didn't allow the host to lock in an RSVP deadline, and gave ppl the illusion that it's OK to RSVP at the last minute.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What exactly does this say about me and my social circle?
Not the PP. It says nothing about you and your social circle, but it does say that, absent some exigent circumstancs, the later responder was very rude.
+1.
I would have told the late responder that I was past the point where the place would allow any extra guests or that I was at my limit on guests and could not accommodate them. I'm sure it wouldn't have done anything to change their MO, but at least maybe they would stop and think twice about being more punctual with an RSVP if it happened enough times. For those that will flame because this only hurts the child, maybe a good tantrum because the child couldn't attend the party will help straighten out the parent!
As for the PP who thinks that others with poor manners reflects negatively on you and your social circle, I disagree. When inviting classmates to a child's birthday party, it is often the case that you are trying to be inclusive, or are merely inviting your child's friend to the party. Since the lack of social graces belongs to the parent in question and not the child and this parent may not even be someone you know personally (or know well), it's a stretch at best to link the two. Now if these are your close friends who continually do this, then that's a different story. But in most cases, it's parents you hardly know, or know at all.
Anonymous wrote:
I had someone RSVP yes a half hour before my daughter's birthday party.
Anonymous wrote:What exactly does this say about me and my social circle?
Not the PP. It says nothing about you and your social circle, but it does say that, absent some exigent circumstancs, the later responder was very rude.
What exactly does this say about me and my social circle?
Anonymous wrote:
If you have guests rsvp-ing an hour before the party, it says a lot about you and your social circle.
Anonymous wrote:Agreed - beaten to death. I'm in the unpopular camp of... Seriously!!!! This is all you ppl have to worry about??? Just buy extra bags, deal with spontaneity, folks that plan poorly or miss multiple emails about kids’ birthday parties. Some of us jugglers are bound to drop balls.
I'm a type A and enjoy hosting parties - and this type of stuff doesn't bother me at all. In fact, I plan for it in advance and project out estimates of no shows, extra siblings, last minute replies, sick kids, etc... in my planning. There's an event planning science to it - and you don't need an exact head count in most cases. If you do, please make that clear in the invite for those of us assuming it's not that important in the grand scheme of things.
In sum, get a life.Flame away….
Anonymous wrote:My DD's party is at a place where they have a cap on the number of kids allowed. If some of her old friends are not coming, I would like to be able to invite some of her new classmates. That is hard to do if her old friends don't RSVP. Can I assume that they aren't coming if they don't RSVP by a week before the party? Would it be rude to invite her new classmates that late?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You expect folks to RSVP more than a week in advance for a kid's party?
Really?
If there's an RSVP by date, then yes, I expect you to provide your response by then, or I will assume you are not coming. Many places require a head count in advance!
I'm with you, OP. It is super-annoying (not to mention rude) when people do not RSVP by the deadline, or even do not RSVP at all. I am a "planner" and I like to have things done and organized too. Just wanted to add my condolences. . .
Hope the party goes well!
Anonymous wrote:Listen lady, you are going to have a long and unhappy life if this is what is getting your knickers in a twist. I have had people RSVP an hour before the party. Just plan for a couple of extra, which will compensate for the no-shows. This is what kiddie birthday parties are in the DMV. Roll with it baby.
I'm a type A and enjoy hosting parties - and this type of stuff doesn't bother me at all. In fact, I plan for it in advance and project out estimates of no shows, extra siblings, last minute replies, sick kids, etc...