Anonymous wrote:You need to coach your daughter to politely respond to other children “I was turning 10, so I was only allowed invite 9 people”. She doesn’t have to justify why she picked the 9 she did.
When you see the other mom, you need to say “I heard Larla was sad that she was not invited to the party. I’m sorry we could not invite everyone, we only allowed Princess to invite 9 people, including her cousin.”
If the mom balks or is a bitch about it and has the guts to say you should have made sure that the 4 neighborhood kids were part of the 8 - just say “we set the limit and respected Princess’s choices”
Life is going to be hard for the other mom if she holds onto this grudge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It wasn't very nice, but it's done. You created an exclusive birthday party and even lavished them with fancy gift bags (that would prove they were there and make other girls jealous).
The drama! It's not like the party was in the front yard for everyone to see!
You forget how hard it is to be a pre-teen girl.
Not the PP, but I would have handled it completely differently. This is a teaching opportunity for the mother. Instead she is out making it a bigger deal than what it was which teaches her daughter that she should expect to be invited to all parties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Normal but still not very nice. You could have scaled back the party a bit. You obviously believe your daughter is Miss Popularity. That's not always a good thing. The most popular girls often go wrong in middle/high school.
Disagree strongly - not everything is an "exclusion" - it is important for your child to know that the birthday girl had parameters, and that sometimes the parameters do not include her. Or are you trying to ruin the birthday girls' day?
Based on OPs description, she's clearly invested in making it an over the top celebration and has placed a pretty high priority on it being an exclusive event. I wouldn't be the least bit surprised that OPs daughter is bragging about the party all over the neighborhood. OP should make sure her daughter isn't rubbing it in the noses of the kids that didn't make the cut.
+1
Personally, I think that kind of celebration is way over the top for a ten-year-old girl, but regardless of the kind of party you host, you and your kid need to keep quiet about it in front of people who aren't invited, and especially not brag about the super fancy special party that you're having that you just can't invite all of your daughter's friends to because she's too popular.
Anonymous wrote:So she hangs out with 4 girls in the neighborhood and you only invited 3 of them?
I think that's tacky and insensitive and doesn't cast you or your daughter in a great light. It's not great that the other mom said anything to anyone, and her daughter will get over it, but you aren't coming out smelling like roses.
Anonymous wrote:You need to coach your daughter to politely respond to other children “I was turning 10, so I was only allowed invite 9 people”. She doesn’t have to justify why she picked the 9 she did.
When you see the other mom, you need to say “I heard Larla was sad that she was not invited to the party. I’m sorry we could not invite everyone, we only allowed Princess to invite 9 people, including her cousin.”
If the mom balks or is a bitch about it and has the guts to say you should have made sure that the 4 neighborhood kids were part of the 8 - just say “we set the limit and respected Princess’s choices”
Life is going to be hard for the other mom if she holds onto this grudge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Normal but still not very nice. You could have scaled back the party a bit. You obviously believe your daughter is Miss Popularity. That's not always a good thing. The most popular girls often go wrong in middle/high school.
Disagree strongly - not everything is an "exclusion" - it is important for your child to know that the birthday girl had parameters, and that sometimes the parameters do not include her. Or are you trying to ruin the birthday girls' day?
Based on OPs description, she's clearly invested in making it an over the top celebration and has placed a pretty high priority on it being an exclusive event. I wouldn't be the least bit surprised that OPs daughter is bragging about the party all over the neighborhood. OP should make sure her daughter isn't rubbing it in the noses of the kids that didn't make the cut.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It wasn't very nice, but it's done. You created an exclusive birthday party and even lavished them with fancy gift bags (that would prove they were there and make other girls jealous).
The drama! It's not like the party was in the front yard for everyone to see!
You forget how hard it is to be a pre-teen girl.
Anonymous wrote:OP lost me at "cost per kid $150"