Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
??? Graduations always have a very limited number of tickets and siblings are never considered. Each graduate usually gets 3 or 4 tickets, no exceptions, because space is so limited at the venue. There might be a mechanism in place for people to donate unused tickets, but without the tickets, families show up with every sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, and cousin. Even my 5th grader had a limit of 3 tickets to his graduation this year.
Pp means that OP should automatically give sibling a ticket. I disagree. I think sibling would rather stay home and probably has already attended many of sibling’s events before.
I don't care if the sibling does or doesn't want to go; in our family, the siblings go. We had a similar issue recently when my oldest graduated from college. His brothers went and all of the grandparents stayed at our house and streamed it live on our TV.
Anonymous wrote:My younger would have zero interest in sitting through her brother's graduation. I'd take the grandparents. They will appreciate it a lot more than the sibling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
??? Graduations always have a very limited number of tickets and siblings are never considered. Each graduate usually gets 3 or 4 tickets, no exceptions, because space is so limited at the venue. There might be a mechanism in place for people to donate unused tickets, but without the tickets, families show up with every sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, and cousin. Even my 5th grader had a limit of 3 tickets to his graduation this year.
Pp means that OP should automatically give sibling a ticket. I disagree. I think sibling would rather stay home and probably has already attended many of sibling’s events before.
I don't care if the sibling does or doesn't want to go; in our family, the siblings go. We had a similar issue recently when my oldest graduated from college. His brothers went and all of the grandparents stayed at our house and streamed it live on our TV.
Way to make everyone unhappy. Congrats, you maximized the misery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
??? Graduations always have a very limited number of tickets and siblings are never considered. Each graduate usually gets 3 or 4 tickets, no exceptions, because space is so limited at the venue. There might be a mechanism in place for people to donate unused tickets, but without the tickets, families show up with every sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, and cousin. Even my 5th grader had a limit of 3 tickets to his graduation this year.
Pp means that OP should automatically give sibling a ticket. I disagree. I think sibling would rather stay home and probably has already attended many of sibling’s events before.
I don't care if the sibling does or doesn't want to go; in our family, the siblings go. We had a similar issue recently when my oldest graduated from college. His brothers went and all of the grandparents stayed at our house and streamed it live on our TV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
??? Graduations always have a very limited number of tickets and siblings are never considered. Each graduate usually gets 3 or 4 tickets, no exceptions, because space is so limited at the venue. There might be a mechanism in place for people to donate unused tickets, but without the tickets, families show up with every sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, and cousin. Even my 5th grader had a limit of 3 tickets to his graduation this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
??? Graduations always have a very limited number of tickets and siblings are never considered. Each graduate usually gets 3 or 4 tickets, no exceptions, because space is so limited at the venue. There might be a mechanism in place for people to donate unused tickets, but without the tickets, families show up with every sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, and cousin. Even my 5th grader had a limit of 3 tickets to his graduation this year.
Pp means that OP should automatically give sibling a ticket. I disagree. I think sibling would rather stay home and probably has already attended many of sibling’s events before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
??? Graduations always have a very limited number of tickets and siblings are never considered. Each graduate usually gets 3 or 4 tickets, no exceptions, because space is so limited at the venue. There might be a mechanism in place for people to donate unused tickets, but without the tickets, families show up with every sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, and cousin. Even my 5th grader had a limit of 3 tickets to his graduation this year.
Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
Anonymous wrote:I have 2 kids, my oldest is graduating from high school. Due to the venue there are limited seats.
We weren't given enough tickets. We are short one. Who do you not take younger (and only other sibling) or a grandparent?
Attending
1-Mom
2- Dad
3-Grandma (on dads side, grandpa is deceased)
We have 2 more tickets, who goes, who doesn't go?
Sibling
Grandma (on moms side)
Grandpa (on moms side)
On my side of the family, my oldest is the oldest grandchild so first to graduate from high school.
On my husband's side, my oldest is the 6th grandchild to graduate.