Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there are close in age cousins, and they are close by (90 minutes or less) then I would.
If they have to stay overnight, I would not. You can host them another weekend and celebrate a birthday, but I would not invite to the party full of preschoolers.
It’s too overwhelming for many kids to have that many people vying for their attention. The kid’s friends come before family in this instance. Family can be seen another time.
Right, it's the kid's day. If mom is going to be strung out and b-----y because too much is on her plate, then don't do it.
Anonymous wrote:If there are close in age cousins, and they are close by (90 minutes or less) then I would.
If they have to stay overnight, I would not. You can host them another weekend and celebrate a birthday, but I would not invite to the party full of preschoolers.
It’s too overwhelming for many kids to have that many people vying for their attention. The kid’s friends come before family in this instance. Family can be seen another time.
Anonymous wrote:We stopped inviting grandparents to the actual party in preschool, when we started doing friends parties (3rd birthday onwards). Now they try to visit on the kids birthdays and we always say no. You don't have to be there ON the kids birthday, that's when we do our family celebration. Grandparents don't need to infringe on our family time. You had your kids' birthdays, let us have ours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We stopped inviting grandparents to the actual party in preschool, when we started doing friends parties (3rd birthday onwards). Now they try to visit on the kids birthdays and we always say no. You don't have to be there ON the kids birthday, that's when we do our family celebration. Grandparents don't need to infringe on our family time. You had your kids' birthdays, let us have ours.
Seriously, newsflash grandparents ARE family.
Totally agree with this poster.
Grandparents can’t win with this generation of parents. Post after post complaining about how their kids grandparents aren’t involved. Then you have so many like PP who shut them out. There is never a time where we would have told either set of our parents they weren’t welcome to come to our home, especially for anything for our kids.
We want grandparents to be involved in that they can do responsible babysitting, can drive kid to appointments, help with homework, supprt kiddo and show pride in their accomplishments, do whatever to take the burden off parents (let's be real, mostly mom). We don't want to be hosting them (more work, less privacy), listening to unasked outdated and often irresponsible Boomer parenting protips, watching grandma dump in a week's worth of sugar in one afternoon (after she has been spoken to about it), put up with mom's late-in-life third husband who we barely know, etc etc etc
So you only want free labor to replace services you'd have to pay for.
Right? Do they hear themselves? These are their parents they’re talking about. So yes please come when we want to put you to work but don’t burden us with your presence otherwise.
Lots of dysfunctional families out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We stopped inviting grandparents to the actual party in preschool, when we started doing friends parties (3rd birthday onwards). Now they try to visit on the kids birthdays and we always say no. You don't have to be there ON the kids birthday, that's when we do our family celebration. Grandparents don't need to infringe on our family time. You had your kids' birthdays, let us have ours.
Seriously, newsflash grandparents ARE family.
Totally agree with this poster.
Grandparents can’t win with this generation of parents. Post after post complaining about how their kids grandparents aren’t involved. Then you have so many like PP who shut them out. There is never a time where we would have told either set of our parents they weren’t welcome to come to our home, especially for anything for our kids.
We want grandparents to be involved in that they can do responsible babysitting, can drive kid to appointments, help with homework, supprt kiddo and show pride in their accomplishments, do whatever to take the burden off parents (let's be real, mostly mom). We don't want to be hosting them (more work, less privacy), listening to unasked outdated and often irresponsible Boomer parenting protips, watching grandma dump in a week's worth of sugar in one afternoon (after she has been spoken to about it), put up with mom's late-in-life third husband who we barely know, etc etc etc
So you only want free labor to replace services you'd have to pay for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We stopped inviting grandparents to the actual party in preschool, when we started doing friends parties (3rd birthday onwards). Now they try to visit on the kids birthdays and we always say no. You don't have to be there ON the kids birthday, that's when we do our family celebration. Grandparents don't need to infringe on our family time. You had your kids' birthdays, let us have ours.
Seriously, newsflash grandparents ARE family.
Totally agree with this poster.
Grandparents can’t win with this generation of parents. Post after post complaining about how their kids grandparents aren’t involved. Then you have so many like PP who shut them out. There is never a time where we would have told either set of our parents they weren’t welcome to come to our home, especially for anything for our kids.
We want grandparents to be involved in that they can do responsible babysitting, can drive kid to appointments, help with homework, supprt kiddo and show pride in their accomplishments, do whatever to take the burden off parents (let's be real, mostly mom). We don't want to be hosting them (more work, less privacy), listening to unasked outdated and often irresponsible Boomer parenting protips, watching grandma dump in a week's worth of sugar in one afternoon (after she has been spoken to about it), put up with mom's late-in-life third husband who we barely know, etc etc etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We stopped inviting grandparents to the actual party in preschool, when we started doing friends parties (3rd birthday onwards). Now they try to visit on the kids birthdays and we always say no. You don't have to be there ON the kids birthday, that's when we do our family celebration. Grandparents don't need to infringe on our family time. You had your kids' birthdays, let us have ours.
Seriously, newsflash grandparents ARE family.
Totally agree with this poster.
Grandparents can’t win with this generation of parents. Post after post complaining about how their kids grandparents aren’t involved. Then you have so many like PP who shut them out. There is never a time where we would have told either set of our parents they weren’t welcome to come to our home, especially for anything for our kids.
We want grandparents to be involved in that they can do responsible babysitting, can drive kid to appointments, help with homework, supprt kiddo and show pride in their accomplishments, do whatever to take the burden off parents (let's be real, mostly mom). We don't want to be hosting them (more work, less privacy), listening to unasked outdated and often irresponsible Boomer parenting protips, watching grandma dump in a week's worth of sugar in one afternoon (after she has been spoken to about it), put up with mom's late-in-life third husband who we barely know, etc etc etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We stopped inviting grandparents to the actual party in preschool, when we started doing friends parties (3rd birthday onwards). Now they try to visit on the kids birthdays and we always say no. You don't have to be there ON the kids birthday, that's when we do our family celebration. Grandparents don't need to infringe on our family time. You had your kids' birthdays, let us have ours.
Seriously, newsflash grandparents ARE family.
I cannot tell but I hope this was sarcastic?
Totally agree with this poster.
Grandparents can’t win with this generation of parents. Post after post complaining about how their kids grandparents aren’t involved. Then you have so many like PP who shut them out. There is never a time where we would have told either set of our parents they weren’t welcome to come to our home, especially for anything for our kids.
We want grandparents to be involved in that they can do responsible babysitting, can drive kid to appointments, help with homework, supprt kiddo and show pride in their accomplishments, do whatever to take the burden off parents (let's be real, mostly mom). We don't want to be hosting them (more work, less privacy), listening to unasked outdated and often irresponsible Boomer parenting protips, watching grandma dump in a week's worth of sugar in one afternoon (after she has been spoken to about it), put up with mom's late-in-life third husband who we barely know, etc etc etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We stopped inviting grandparents to the actual party in preschool, when we started doing friends parties (3rd birthday onwards). Now they try to visit on the kids birthdays and we always say no. You don't have to be there ON the kids birthday, that's when we do our family celebration. Grandparents don't need to infringe on our family time. You had your kids' birthdays, let us have ours.
Seriously, newsflash grandparents ARE family.
Totally agree with this poster.
Grandparents can’t win with this generation of parents. Post after post complaining about how their kids grandparents aren’t involved. Then you have so many like PP who shut them out. There is never a time where we would have told either set of our parents they weren’t welcome to come to our home, especially for anything for our kids.