Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should just do what you’re doing and celebrate with family and cake on Christmas.
Then plan a half birthday party in June. It will be a lot more fun for your kid than trying to squeeze in a winter party.
Don't try to do this. This is ridiculous.
No, it's brilliant. The party is in June, and the birthday is acknowledged in a low-key way the day of. No one wants yet another party in December and everyone is partied out in January.
This will start to matter once your child is in grade school, OP, because they'll see other kids' parties and they want one of their own. For right now, you can just continue to have the low-key acknowledgement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should just do what you’re doing and celebrate with family and cake on Christmas.
Then plan a half birthday party in June. It will be a lot more fun for your kid than trying to squeeze in a winter party.
Don't try to do this. This is ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:We always celebrate our toddler's birthday when we have family over for Christmas. And we send cupcakes to daycare/school. But attendance gets spotty around the holidays, and there are some other friends who don't go to the same school.
Would you have a separate birthday party? If so, when?
If we have one we'd request no gifts as there have already been plenty.
Tbh I'm somewhat burnt out from the holidays. But this may be our only child, so my conscience (or anxiety?) is saying we should be making an effort on these connections.
Anonymous wrote:We always celebrate our toddler's birthday when we have family over for Christmas. And we send cupcakes to daycare/school. But attendance gets spotty around the holidays, and there are some other friends who don't go to the same school.
Would you have a separate birthday party? If so, when?
If we have one we'd request no gifts as there have already been plenty.
Tbh I'm somewhat burnt out from the holidays. But this may be our only child, so my conscience (or anxiety?) is saying we should be making an effort on these connections.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't know why there's a poster who is so against scheduling the party at another time, but it's very frequent. My two kids, 5 years apart, have their birthdays less than two weeks apart, and for many years, we pushed back the parties because it was too much. I know summer birthday kids who schedule their parties purposefully during the school year so their friends can make it. My cousin's birthday is on Dec 24th, and she always had a party at a different time.
IT'S ALL FINE.
You have no idea what other people are thinking.
OP, if you have a Christmas baby, teach him/ her to embrace it. A party in June does the opposite of that.
As they grow up, they will most likely always have family around to celebrate. How lucky is that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a New Year's Eve baby. I never found a good time to have a birthday party. If you try before the holidays, then you lose people because they're busy. After the holidays, the weather is always a factor in this area. We decided for us that birthday celebrations would be just our family and that we'd do special things - like a day at an indoor water park, learning archery, things like that. And always a restaurant dinner at the birthday kid's choice restaurant.
My friends have a New Years Eve baby and her birthday parties were very popular and well attended. She always had a sleepover and a big New Years Eve theme. Parents loved dropping their girls off for the whole night and they would often go to their own parties or dinner as a couple instead. It was basically babysitting on the hardest night of the year to get a babysitter.
OP I think you should do a mid January birthday party. I know what you mean about being burnt out though. My dh is a January 2nd baby and I am SO burnt out by the time his birthday rolls around. I can't imagine if it were my kid. We did IVF and we actively stopped treatments to avoid the months of December and January.
My son was not a sleepover kind of kid. But I can see how it would be well attended if that were your child's thing. We did have New Year's parties every year and a few kids in our group had New Year's eve and New Year's Day birthdays (four to be exact), so there was always cake. But it definitely wasn't a birthday party for any of the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a New Year's Eve baby. I never found a good time to have a birthday party. If you try before the holidays, then you lose people because they're busy. After the holidays, the weather is always a factor in this area. We decided for us that birthday celebrations would be just our family and that we'd do special things - like a day at an indoor water park, learning archery, things like that. And always a restaurant dinner at the birthday kid's choice restaurant.
My friends have a New Years Eve baby and her birthday parties were very popular and well attended. She always had a sleepover and a big New Years Eve theme. Parents loved dropping their girls off for the whole night and they would often go to their own parties or dinner as a couple instead. It was basically babysitting on the hardest night of the year to get a babysitter.
OP I think you should do a mid January birthday party. I know what you mean about being burnt out though. My dh is a January 2nd baby and I am SO burnt out by the time his birthday rolls around. I can't imagine if it were my kid. We did IVF and we actively stopped treatments to avoid the months of December and January.
Anonymous wrote:OP what you will realize as your kid gets older and he attends more bday parties is that it is completely common for parents to end up scheduling the "friend/class" party a couple weeks off from the actual birth date even if that date is not right around a major holiday. This is due to a whole host of reasons - the venue was already booked, kid had his own conflict with sports or other activities, a friend/classmate already had a party that date, a relative (like grandparents) had conflicts, and on and on...
So if you have a class bday party for your Christmas baby in, say, mid January, you'll basically be no different than everyone else whose kids' birthdays are any random day of the year.
I'll add that January is actually a great month for scheduling kid bday parties because most folks are not particularly busy and have few conflicts -- even a lot of sports stuff is lighter. Only downside is it needs to be an indoor party, but whatever.
So have your family celebration with the separate cake on you child's actual birthday, and then have a class/friend party (when child is older) a couple weeks later in January. (And you can do no gifts if that's your thing, but you don't need to just because your child was born around Christmas.)