Anonymous wrote:I don't necessarily think it was wrong to not invite the 1 girl, but I do think this could have been an opportunity for OP and her DD to be gracious and discreet about this kind of thing. It's the polite thing to do. OP's post makes me think it didn't play out this way which is why it's being discussed in the neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:OP Here. Thanks for the replies. I will not confront the mom, I wasn't planning on doing that anyway, I was just annoyed by what she was saying. I will let it blow over. To clarify, there are tons of kids in my neighborhood. My daughter has known the two girls that were invited for a bit over 5 years. The three of them are close. If my daughter had only chosen one of them I would have told her that the other one needed to be part of the 10 or that neither could be part of the 10 because including only one would be plain mean, the three are close. The new girl likes to play with them, and they do play together, but it's just not the same bond. My daughter likes her, but not as close as her other friends (even those who were not invited.) BTW, there are other girls in our neighborhood that come to play with my daughter and he two friends, but not as often.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to coach your daughter to politely respond to other children “I was turning 10, so I was only allowed invite 9 people”. She doesn’t have to justify why she picked the 9 she did.
When you see the other mom, you need to say “I heard Larla was sad that she was not invited to the party. I’m sorry we could not invite everyone, we only allowed Princess to invite 9 people, including her cousin.”
If the mom balks or is a bitch about it and has the guts to say you should have made sure that the 4 neighborhood kids were part of the 8 - just say “we set the limit and respected Princess’s choices”
Life is going to be hard for the other mom if she holds onto this grudge.
You have no obligation to invite everybody in the neighborhood or scale back the party or do whatever it is that society thinks you need to do. You had a party for your daughter with certain limits and that's fine. Life happens and not everybody gets to be included in everything.
True, but the consequences of what OP and her daughter did include people talking about them excluding one 10 year old girl. Just as life happens and that girl was left out, life happens and neighbors may now have a poorer opinion of OP and her daughter. One thing that always annoys me about people excusing sh**ty behavior as "life happens" is that those people usually aren't willing to accept that "life happens" also means they have to deal with the fall out of their sh**ty behavior.
This all sounds like something out of Big Little Lies, btw...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:... She invited ... 3 neighborhood friends... In the neighborhood my daughter plays with 4 girls. She is close with 2 of them and we have all been neighbors for 5 years.
Based on the original post it sounded like her daughter + 4 neighborhood girls play together, 3 of which were invited -- the 2 she is close with and a third.
Of course, OP's post has introduced new details and new math, so I'm sure the original post was inaccurate and the neighborhood is suddenly teaming with 10 year old girls.
Anonymous wrote:... She invited ... 3 neighborhood friends... In the neighborhood my daughter plays with 4 girls. She is close with 2 of them and we have all been neighbors for 5 years.
Anonymous wrote:This is one of those "you made your choice, accept the consequences" situations. OP chose to have an extremely fancy party and limit invitations in a way that pretty much guaranteed that the 4th neighbor girl would feel left out. That was OP's choice and arguably not unreasonable. But OP has to live with the ENTIRELY PREDICTABLE consequences of the girl feeling left out and the mother talking about it.
You don't get to both throw exclusive parties, and not have people hurt and upset when they don't get invited to your exclusive parties.
Agree with other PPs that the person you really hurt was your DD. You should have considered the social dynamics and allowed her to invite neighbor #4.
Anonymous wrote:It wasn't very nice, but it's done. You created an exclusive birthday party and even lavished them with fancy gift bags (that would prove they were there and make other girls jealous).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to coach your daughter to politely respond to other children “I was turning 10, so I was only allowed invite 9 people”. She doesn’t have to justify why she picked the 9 she did.
When you see the other mom, you need to say “I heard Larla was sad that she was not invited to the party. I’m sorry we could not invite everyone, we only allowed Princess to invite 9 people, including her cousin.”
If the mom balks or is a bitch about it and has the guts to say you should have made sure that the 4 neighborhood kids were part of the 8 - just say “we set the limit and respected Princess’s choices”
Life is going to be hard for the other mom if she holds onto this grudge.
You have no obligation to invite everybody in the neighborhood or scale back the party or do whatever it is that society thinks you need to do. You had a party for your daughter with certain limits and that's fine. Life happens and not everybody gets to be included in everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You need to coach your daughter to politely respond to other children “I was turning 10, so I was only allowed invite 9 people”. She doesn’t have to justify why she picked the 9 she did.
When you see the other mom, you need to say “I heard Larla was sad that she was not invited to the party. I’m sorry we could not invite everyone, we only allowed Princess to invite 9 people, including her cousin.”
If the mom balks or is a bitch about it and has the guts to say you should have made sure that the 4 neighborhood kids were part of the 8 - just say “we set the limit and respected Princess’s choices”
Life is going to be hard for the other mom if she holds onto this grudge.
You have no obligation to invite everybody in the neighborhood or scale back the party or do whatever it is that society thinks you need to do. You had a party for your daughter with certain limits and that's fine. Life happens and not everybody gets to be included in everything.