Anonymous wrote:Our SN son who is in an inclusion classroom in 1st grade has been talking a lot about his classmate Larla's upcoming birthday party. Larla is an amazingly sweet child who is very warm and caring to my son despite his issues. He says Larla invited him several times and I'm sure she did since he had the date and the venue.
Unfortunately he was actually not invited. Another parent who is a friend checked the Evite and our son was not on the list so there's no chance of a misplaced email or something.
I have been hoping DS would forget about the party but he can read the calendar and knows it's coming up. Plus it's likely Larla will be talking about it at some point in class after she has had the party as she is a very talkative girl.
What should I do? Should I tell him up front that he's not invited and that you don't always get invited to everything? Seems kind of young for that kind of talk and in his mind he was invited by the girl even though the mother did not include him. Should I schedule a trip to go out of town on that weekend so that I can tell him we wouldn't be able to go anyway? He may throw a fit but we could cheer him up by going to visit our in-laws or something like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had a similar situation (SN child insisting NT child invited her to a party). I really did not know what to do. I emailed the other mom, like, hey-Larla invited my dc to her birthday party and I was just checking to see if she was on the guest list-no big deal either way just let me know!
She never replied to my email :/.
Can't believe you did that. If your kid was invited, you would have had an invitation.
The birthday child invited her child, though.
Anonymous wrote:I'd tell my son that we have other plans for that day (and can't go to Larla's party) and then tell him what the fun plans are..."today we're going to try out the bounce house we saw last summer!" Something exciting.
Anonymous wrote: I have this exact situation. I acted like it was no big deal. I said we haven't received an invitation and that's OK because some kids feel more comfortable having smaller parties. I reminded her of smaller parties she attended where not everyone was invited.
My child insisted she was invited. I said the next time her friend asks about coming to her birthday party just say you didn't receive an invitation, but you hope she has a wonderful birthday. I figure if it's an oversite an evite will come soon and if it isn't then it's a lesson for DD. It's OK not to be invited. Sometimes people will talk about parties in front of you. I explained I don't think her friend was being mean. I think sometimes families have to limit the amount of kids they invite due to space/costs, even though they want to invite everyone their child wants there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had a similar situation (SN child insisting NT child invited her to a party). I really did not know what to do. I emailed the other mom, like, hey-Larla invited my dc to her birthday party and I was just checking to see if she was on the guest list-no big deal either way just let me know!
She never replied to my email :/.
Can't believe you did that. If your kid was invited, you would have had an invitation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had a similar situation (SN child insisting NT child invited her to a party). I really did not know what to do. I emailed the other mom, like, hey-Larla invited my dc to her birthday party and I was just checking to see if she was on the guest list-no big deal either way just let me know!
She never replied to my email :/.
Can't believe you did that. If your kid was invited, you would have had an invitation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have had a similar situation (SN child insisting NT child invited her to a party). I really did not know what to do. I emailed the other mom, like, hey-Larla invited my dc to her birthday party and I was just checking to see if she was on the guest list-no big deal either way just let me know!
She never replied to my email :/.
Can't believe you did that. If your kid was invited, you would have had an invitation.