Anonymous wrote:I like the suggestion of having all 3 in one day but at different times 10-12, 1:30-3:30, and 5-7. Then you can just keep the house decorated, the one bouncy house rental, etc - the morning party can either be bagels, fruit and cake or sandwiches, veggie, tray, cake, and then the 1:30-3:30 can be pizza & cupcakes, and the evening party can be be Chik fil a or chipotle and cake. Relatives can all come over once - yes, exhausting but it's all done in one day! You save money on the rentals, decor. You only really have to do deep cleaning, etc!
Anonymous wrote:
OP here- I meant a birthday vacation. Like a couple days at Great Wolf Lodge, overnight trip to NYC (my oldest likes Wicked so I thought that might appeal to her) or a beach vacation. We have our real vacations already (and definitely not during the heat of summer).
Anonymous wrote:Do one family party jointly for all 3 kids.
Do small parties for the individual kids. They can each invite 3-5 friends and you do something then have pizza and go home.
Anonymous wrote:You are the adult. You don’t have to convince them to have one combined party. You tell them that they are having one combined party. The kids do not get to argue. If they are that upset, they can choose to invite their friends or not.
If this will ring true, you tell them that now that they’re older, we need to start saving more for college. Then you calculate the money you saved, divide it by three , and put that much extra in the college accounts. My kids shut up very quickly when I say, “The thing you are asking for costs x and I have y in my bank account right now.”
As an aside, I have a family member who has an ultra high net worth. All of the kids have struggled with debt in adulthood. I am convinced it’s because they never had the “ we can’t afford that” conversation growing up. Saying no is a gift you give to your child. Please tell your kids no, and mean it.