Anonymous wrote:What are you hoping DCUM will do about this, OP?
Anonymous wrote:That is odd and I agree that food is basically implied in this scenario.
However…so what? So you get your kids some food. There you go. Problem solved. No need to run to the internet to whine about it. It really is OK if kids are hungry for an hour or two. You feed them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have two kids 11 and 8 and we've been to many birthdays over the years. Majority of time it’s assumed some form of food will be served, or invitation will specify "snacks and cake" if there isn't going to be pizza or meal. Today my 8yr old DD went to a swim party. The invitation said 10-12:00 would be swimming, and then an hour in the party room afterward. Only cupcakes were served, and I guess the rest of the time was opening presents and playing games in the party room. My kid was starving by the time I picked her up, as were the other girls. They were all begging for parents to stop and get them something to eat. Am I mistaken to have assumed they would be eating during the 12:00-1:00 time frame after swimming for 2 hours?
Poor little princesses are hungry.ba hum bug
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes there should have been food.
However, if it wasn’t on the invite ( which u state it wasn’t) I would have asked the host just to clarify. If the host said no I’d have sent snacks with my kid.
Your kid can’t go three hours without snacks?
After swimming? No. Most people would need something in that time frame. Hopefully the kids were being loud about it so the host realized their mistake. I bet even the birthday child was hungry.
Are they doing laps for a few hours? Ocean swimming? Please. No wonder so many kids are obese. My kids go 6 hrs in between meals and there’s no need for snacks.
Sure they do. I guess they are home schooled then, liar.
Anonymous wrote:I have two kids 11 and 8 and we've been to many birthdays over the years. Majority of time it’s assumed some form of food will be served, or invitation will specify "snacks and cake" if there isn't going to be pizza or meal. Today my 8yr old DD went to a swim party. The invitation said 10-12:00 would be swimming, and then an hour in the party room afterward. Only cupcakes were served, and I guess the rest of the time was opening presents and playing games in the party room. My kid was starving by the time I picked her up, as were the other girls. They were all begging for parents to stop and get them something to eat. Am I mistaken to have assumed they would be eating during the 12:00-1:00 time frame after swimming for 2 hours?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes there should have been food.
However, if it wasn’t on the invite ( which u state it wasn’t) I would have asked the host just to clarify. If the host said no I’d have sent snacks with my kid.
Your kid can’t go three hours without snacks?
After swimming? No. Most people would need something in that time frame. Hopefully the kids were being loud about it so the host realized their mistake. I bet even the birthday child was hungry.
Are they doing laps for a few hours? Ocean swimming? Please. No wonder so many kids are obese. My kids go 6 hrs in between meals and there’s no need for snacks.
Anonymous wrote:I think posts like these are helpful for parents who might not know the ins and outs of how to host a party.
You don't have a party that runs through lunchtime and not provide something to eat other than a mass dose of sugar.
If the parent couldn't afford food, then start the party at 1 - 3, or 9:30 to noon.