Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask him why he doesn't want to go.
Most kids love birthday parties! Especially if he's a social kid otherwise, it sounds like there's something going on. I wouldn't force him to go to any birthday parties though.
No. Not all kids love birthday parties. Some find them overwhelming. We ask my son before we RSVP, but we also talk him into saying yes. Ypu may want to consider making your child go. he may actually dislike them for awhile.
Anonymous wrote:Ask him why he doesn't want to go.
Most kids love birthday parties! Especially if he's a social kid otherwise, it sounds like there's something going on. I wouldn't force him to go to any birthday parties though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this sound bad? - We tell our kid you go because you are there to support that person's birthday. How would you like it if you have a party and no one shows up? You don't have to go to all of them but you need to select a few. You can't refuse all of them.
I really feel strongly about not teaching kids the concept of social obligation when it comes to some random kid in their class. Family, yes. Kids at school, no.
I think less of you then.
Really? NP here who totally agrees with that stance. You don't owe social obligations of hanging out outside of class to people just because you happened to end up in the same classroom. Relationships should be mutually desired and mutually fulfilling in some way. My kids have each had years where there were one or a few classmates that they really didn't get on with, and I would never force them to have or pretend to have a friendship with those kids outside of school. The social obligation that they owe to their classmates is to be a polite good citizen in the classroom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this sound bad? - We tell our kid you go because you are there to support that person's birthday. How would you like it if you have a party and no one shows up? You don't have to go to all of them but you need to select a few. You can't refuse all of them.
I really feel strongly about not teaching kids the concept of social obligation when it comes to some random kid in their class. Family, yes. Kids at school, no.
I think less of you then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this sound bad? - We tell our kid you go because you are there to support that person's birthday. How would you like it if you have a party and no one shows up? You don't have to go to all of them but you need to select a few. You can't refuse all of them.
I really feel strongly about not teaching kids the concept of social obligation when it comes to some random kid in their class. Family, yes. Kids at school, no.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly I don't know how to respond. When my kids are invited to bday parties they go. I don't ask if they want to as it creates a power struggle if they knew they could opt out--maybe I want to go to Joey and not Sally that sort of thing. I just think parents today almost create problems.
Anonymous wrote:Does this sound bad? - We tell our kid you go because you are there to support that person's birthday. How would you like it if you have a party and no one shows up? You don't have to go to all of them but you need to select a few. You can't refuse all of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks all. As for the food allergy issue, it is only an issue with the cake and I always bring something for DS like a cupcake. I don't mention it to the hosts because I don't think it's their problem to handle it. Many of our friends who know DS will ask in advance if what they're serving is ok.
I should clarify that he doesn't avoid a party if it's his good friend or if it's something he thinks is cool. He doesn't avoid crowds (he loves theme parks, moon bounce places etc).
I told him that we'd skip this next party but moving forward we are going to commit to more parties and honor those commitments. Just like being a team player with soccer, we need to be a team player with our friends and support them.
dumb
Care to explain why I'm "dumb?"