Anonymous wrote:We are the polar opposite of these families. We do not do the parties when the kids are little because they hardly remember them, a lot of it is just for adults, little ones get easily overwhelmed, etc. It is a big deal in our family when the child gets to have their first “real” birthday party. For my daughter this summer turning 8, it will be her first one!
I really cannot stand when parents try to rush childhood. And now they are over it? No duh, Sherlocks. I could have told you that. Well, do not ruin it for the rest of us who exercised patience and now our children can still genuinely the true joy of childhood. Sorry YOU made foolish decisions early in so now you are exhausted and your kids are jaded.
And now they try to turn it around and get moralistic about it and impose it on others? That is rich, really rich.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a friend’s 50th birthday party last year. She celebrates yearly. I stopped having them at 8 or 9. Both of us are normal. There isn’t an age you stop and it’s a personal choice.
Anonymous wrote:Those parents are a-holes. Have a party.
Kids in our neighborhood & school at 9-10 are still having small parties. By 11, it seems the parties dwindle to a friend or two sleeping over or laser tag + pizza with the birthday kid’s family.
Anonymous wrote:Have a party with school friends. Don’t invite your sour grapes neighbors
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So they don't want *any* kids to have parties because they don't want *their* kids to have a party? And they don't want their kids to feel left out by not having a party they don't want to give, so they're trying to make sure no one has parties?
Yes. -OP