Anonymous wrote:Just an FYI for everyone saying the OP wove busy supervising the whole class. I used to work at a place that did weekend parties. There were hired people who ran the parties. We didn’t need the parents to do anything other than show up with food, pay and tip, and take the garbage bags full of gifts out to the car.
Anonymous wrote:OP- it’s very telling about your character if you cannot see the POV of the asking mom. I didn’t read all of the pages in this thread, so others may feel differently than me. Look at it as an accommodation for the child so that he can participate and have fun celebrating your child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The ones my dcs were invited to were not close so I may have gone to a nearby Starbucks for 30 min or so and returned or brought a book and read. It was so common 10 yrs ago for Parents to hang around these bounce places/ party venues as they were in industrial parks.
We did not stay to be entertained by hosts but more of a convenience for us. Don’t overthink it.
Yeah we went to a party yesterday that was 90 minutes long and a 45 minute drive from our house (and the school our kids attend). Would not have made sense to come home!
Anonymous wrote:The ones my dcs were invited to were not close so I may have gone to a nearby Starbucks for 30 min or so and returned or brought a book and read. It was so common 10 yrs ago for Parents to hang around these bounce places/ party venues as they were in industrial parks.
We did not stay to be entertained by hosts but more of a convenience for us. Don’t overthink it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. These responses are getting a little out of hand. I'm just annoyed because I feel like this mom is pushing in on a party she wasn't invited to. Maybe her kid has special needs. I don't know. That doesn't feel like my problem.
This is a really bizarre interpretation of what the mom was asking which was to stay so her kid would be OK and by extension the party go smoothly.
What kind of super exciting venue is this that parents are trying to finagle their own invite? Or maybe OP is a minor celebrity or wife of an athlete or something?
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. These responses are getting a little out of hand. I'm just annoyed because I feel like this mom is pushing in on a party she wasn't invited to. Maybe her kid has special needs. I don't know. That doesn't feel like my problem.
Anonymous wrote:These responses are getting a little out of hand.
NP. I don't think they are. The other mom is being very polite. I can almost guarantee that other parents will stay too; it just wouldn't have crossed their minds that anyone would object to them doing so. Inviting a few parents of kids in the same grade who plan to stay makes it even more likely that some other parents will stay. I don't think anyone would think a mom who invited the entire class would only allow a few of her chosen parent friends to stay. That's just plain strange.
Anonymous wrote:These responses are getting a little out of hand.
NP. I don't think they are. The other mom is being very polite. I can almost guarantee that other parents will stay too; it just wouldn't have crossed their minds that anyone would object to them doing so. Inviting a few parents of kids in the same grade who plan to stay makes it even more likely that some other parents will stay. I don't think anyone would think a mom who invited the entire class would only allow a few of her chosen parent friends to stay. That's just plain strange.
These responses are getting a little out of hand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP. These responses are getting a little out of hand. I'm just annoyed because I feel like this mom is pushing in on a party she wasn't invited to. Maybe her kid has special needs. I don't know. That doesn't feel like my problem.
OP, if you invite the whole class, you invite the whole class. YOU are the one making a problem where there is none. Period. Stop whining and be a gracious host.
The students in the class were invited NOT every kid's parent/parents. If your child is still tied to you apron strings by 2nd grade, then RSVP "No."