Anonymous wrote:No way would I drop off my 4 year old with someone I don't know. Not only that, this is good or bad, but my 4 year old would not be comfortable with it and would probably hold onto my leg if I tried to leave. I think you can request that you stay. Actually my older dd was in K last year, and she was invited to a girl's party turning 6, and several mom's had to stay because their K student didn't want to be dropped off without mom or dad as well.
Anonymous wrote:11:53 here. OP, how do you know it is a drop-off party?
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks for the responses. My daughter would happily attend alone, but I'm not comfortable sending her alone to a home where I don't know the parents.
Some PPs suggested emailing the parents to ask if I can stay. I would love to do this. Is it rude? On the one hand they might prefer I stay than have a guest decline, but on the other hand they're clearly hosting a drop off party and my choices might be to accept or decline but not ask to change the terms. What do you think?
Anonymous wrote:It is definitely the norm at Janney. There are always a couple of helicopters who won't take off at first, but eventually almost all do.
Anonymous wrote:If I don't know the parents then this is a great opportunity to get to know them. Depending on the location and time of the party I have seen parents that stay, even if its a drop off party at age 8. For playdates and parties if I don't know the parent, I arrive, drop off kid talk with the parents, help with the party set up and decide at that point if I will stay or go. Sometimes there is a nice social gathering for parents going on and I enjoy gettting to know everyone. Sometimes I'm one of the few that is staying. For us I'd rather use it as a way to meet other kids and parents.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks for the responses. My daughter would happily attend alone, but I'm not comfortable sending her alone to a home where I don't know the parents.
Some PPs suggested emailing the parents to ask if I can stay. I would love to do this. Is it rude? On the one hand they might prefer I stay than have a guest decline, but on the other hand they're clearly hosting a drop off party and my choices might be to accept or decline but not ask to change the terms. What do you think?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I recently had a newly-hired employee escorted to work by his mother. (Not dropped off... she parked, came inside, introduced herself to the other staff and to me (the business owner), asked to see his work area, etc etc.) Worse than that, the employee didn't seem to think this was strange or embarrassing. That's YOU people in 15-20 years.
Oh come on PP. A 4YO is not a working teen or an adult. Not all moms who are responsible and safe in the care of their toddlers are going to end up like this mom you describe.
The comparison is every bit as valid as those who say it's "naive" to discount the possibility of a weird uncle.
Except, weird uncles are rare. In my experience, and that of my husband (a college prof who fields multiple calls every semester from parents who are disappointed in the grade Timmy earned), helicopter parenting into adulthood is a growing epidemic. Fight it!