Anonymous wrote:Yes, OP is dodging the issue. OP, how many girls are in the class and how many did you INVITE? Not how many accepted your invite - how many did you invite?
For a mom to do what this mom did, the numbers must be bad.....
Anonymous wrote:Yes, OP is dodging the issue. OP, how many girls are in the class and how many did you INVITE? Not how many accepted your invite - how many did you invite?
For a mom to do what this mom did, the numbers must be bad.....
Anonymous wrote:Op here. There are a lot of children at this school - there is no rule about whom to invite. Especially when my dd is only having 5 girls at most out to dinner. No party here. Just a dinner out at a restaurant. my dd likes this girl fine - but she doesn't want to leave out a bestie in favor of someone who demands to be included in an intimate group.
This thread is unbelievable. What bitches. How does OP know what friends the other girl has. I think the mom was driven by a desire to shield her child from rejection by OP's child. Imagine how desparate this mother must have felt to have reached out to you this way. Your DD obviously excluded this girl and her mom is confronting you about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the sake of harmony, my kids' school has an unwritten but very strong birthday party norm in the lower school that if you're inviting more than 3 kids of a particular gender in a particular class, you have to invite them all. That is: you can decide to have a dinner with your three closest friends only, but you can't invite six out of the eight third grade girls, or 10 out of fifteen boys. I actually think this is a pretty good norm (and just enforced it with my DD, who wanted to invite 13 out of 15 girls to her 10th bday party). OP, is it possible that your school also has some such norm, or that the other mom came from a school with such a norm? If so, perhaps she formed the impression, from her daughter, that your daughter had singled hers out for exclusion, and thought you might not have realized....
I agree, it's really awkward, and I would never tell anyone they "should" invite my child to something. But I feel bad for the girl, who may have felt very excluded, rightly or wrongly. Once or twice this has happened to one of my kids -- once, for instance, a parent had booked an end of year party at a place with very strict space limits, and only invited six of the nine girls in my DD's class. My DD didn't get invited because she just didn't know the hostess as well as the other kids... but boy did she feel left out.
What kind of school are your kids at where they think they can force you to invite every child in the class to your home for a party? Has the world gone completely insane? Is this Alexandria Country Day School by any chance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was SUPREMELY uncomfortable doing this, but I just basically told her it was up to DD to invite her friends, as we were having very few children at the celebration. It was truly awful and I'm still reeling from it, honestly.
So you asked your daughter if she wanted to invite this girl. WOW. Way to raise a mean girl.
Why not talk to your daughter about including her. You don't know why this party is important to her, but apparently it is. How flattering this is for your daughter. I would want my daughter to take the high road. When she gets there, she is sure to meet some classy girls!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was SUPREMELY uncomfortable doing this, but I just basically told her it was up to DD to invite her friends, as we were having very few children at the celebration. It was truly awful and I'm still reeling from it, honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For the sake of harmony, my kids' school has an unwritten but very strong birthday party norm in the lower school that if you're inviting more than 3 kids of a particular gender in a particular class, you have to invite them all. That is: you can decide to have a dinner with your three closest friends only, but you can't invite six out of the eight third grade girls, or 10 out of fifteen boys. I actually think this is a pretty good norm (and just enforced it with my DD, who wanted to invite 13 out of 15 girls to her 10th bday party). OP, is it possible that your school also has some such norm, or that the other mom came from a school with such a norm? If so, perhaps she formed the impression, from her daughter, that your daughter had singled hers out for exclusion, and thought you might not have realized....
I agree, it's really awkward, and I would never tell anyone they "should" invite my child to something. But I feel bad for the girl, who may have felt very excluded, rightly or wrongly. Once or twice this has happened to one of my kids -- once, for instance, a parent had booked an end of year party at a place with very strict space limits, and only invited six of the nine girls in my DD's class. My DD didn't get invited because she just didn't know the hostess as well as the other kids... but boy did she feel left out.
What kind of school are your kids at where they think they can force you to invite every child in the class to your home for a party? Has the world gone completely insane? Is this Alexandria Country Day School by any chance?
No, not Alexandria Country Day. The school doesn't "force" anyone to do anything -- it suggests that parents do this, and in my experience most are extremely happy to do this. I think things obviously change when kids are older, but for a bunch of six or seven year olds, most parents understand that it's cruel to exclude one or two children from a party that everyone else goes to.
Good lord. I guess I won't be hosting birthday parties then. I'm supposed to pay for food and entertainment for every single kid in my DS's grade when he gets to that point, and open my home to 25+ kids? When did we get to the point where we teach our children that their feelings should never be hurt? I got excluded from parties as a kid and managed to survive.
Yet another reason why so many kids are growing up to be helpless these days. College mental health offices are packed with kids who are falling apart now that mommy and daddy aren't there to manage every aspect of their lives anymore. Pathetic.