Anonymous wrote:Order pizza and cake. Pizza and cake is not a meal. It is party food. Add some soft drinks too.
Geez!
Anonymous wrote:Omg all of these precious snowflakes will live! It's one afternoon! Pack a sandwich or make a drive-thru run before the party if your post-activities kid is famished! Plan ahead!
OP, we've attended many parties like this. It's not rocket science to either feed your kid before or after. Why must some parents make this so difficult! Don't listen to them!
Anonymous wrote:If you're hosting a party, especially one where people are bringing gifts, at the very least you should be springing for appetizers. If you don't like the menu you don't have to eat it or you can change the venue. If the party is anywhere around meal time there should be something more substantial to eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The year I could barely afford the party we did bowling for 11 of her friends and I just did cake and apple juice. The party was mid-afternoon though, so not at a meal time.
Why have a party you could barely afford? Why not do something more affordable, like at home or even a playground for free and take her and one kid bowling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good grief! Everybody seems so greedy. The only given food for a birthday party is cake. Ice cream, pizza, chips, etc., are nice extras. If she was doing a birthday party starting at a meal time it would be reasonable to expect a meal.
She's having the party at a laser tag/bounce house venue. I don't know why she's being accused of being cheap. These places are not cheap to throw a party. I don't know the specific location she's considering, but I've been to similar places and the food is truly awful. I suspect the kids would rather have time to play than eat.
This is not a dinner party. It is not obligatory to feed a hungry child coming from another activity or going to another activity. Feed your child lunch at lunch time and dinner at dinner time. If your child is that hungry, swing through a drive-thru.
Dinner time for some kids is 5 PM. My kids usually have a full meal after school around 4PM. If it becomes a hassle and there is no food, we either skip it or just leave early. Common decency is to have food.
It's fine that your kids typically eat a meal at 4pm but you have to realize most people do not consider 4pm dinner time (or lunch time) & shouldn't expect others to feed them a meal at that time. If they have play dates at another children's homes after school, do you expect the hosts to serve them a full meal at 4?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good grief! Everybody seems so greedy. The only given food for a birthday party is cake. Ice cream, pizza, chips, etc., are nice extras. If she was doing a birthday party starting at a meal time it would be reasonable to expect a meal.
She's having the party at a laser tag/bounce house venue. I don't know why she's being accused of being cheap. These places are not cheap to throw a party. I don't know the specific location she's considering, but I've been to similar places and the food is truly awful. I suspect the kids would rather have time to play than eat.
This is not a dinner party. It is not obligatory to feed a hungry child coming from another activity or going to another activity. Feed your child lunch at lunch time and dinner at dinner time. If your child is that hungry, swing through a drive-thru.
Dinner time for some kids is 5 PM. My kids usually have a full meal after school around 4PM. If it becomes a hassle and there is no food, we either skip it or just leave early. Common decency is to have food.
Anonymous wrote:Good grief! Everybody seems so greedy. The only given food for a birthday party is cake. Ice cream, pizza, chips, etc., are nice extras. If she was doing a birthday party starting at a meal time it would be reasonable to expect a meal.
She's having the party at a laser tag/bounce house venue. I don't know why she's being accused of being cheap. These places are not cheap to throw a party. I don't know the specific location she's considering, but I've been to similar places and the food is truly awful. I suspect the kids would rather have time to play than eat.
This is not a dinner party. It is not obligatory to feed a hungry child coming from another activity or going to another activity. Feed your child lunch at lunch time and dinner at dinner time. If your child is that hungry, swing through a drive-thru.
Anonymous wrote:The year I could barely afford the party we did bowling for 11 of her friends and I just did cake and apple juice. The party was mid-afternoon though, so not at a meal time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Order pizza and cake. Pizza and cake is not a meal. It is party food. Add some soft drinks too.
Geez!
Did you read? OP doesn't like the venue's options and they don't allow outside food.
OP let people know it's cake and punch. If their kids need more than that, parents need to take care of it.
The OP does not have to like the food the venue serves? What options are those? Quinoa cakes with Kale? No, it is probably cheese pizza! And I am betting that most of the patrons of that venue (aka kids) actually like that food.
OP can serve pizza and cake or she can serve cake only and tell the guests that it is a "no gifts" party.