Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look if they are obnoxious enough to say it in such a way that means “we prefer not to bring a gift. Just letting you know!” Then you don’t need their gift anyway. I think that’s pretty obnoxious in the first place. I would be so tempted to say no need to attend...
yes i agree, i don't need their gifts. but i would much prefer that they just don't bring anything rather than force me to tell them that they don't need do so that they feel better about it. i resent being put on the spot to say "yup, we expect a gift" or pretend it's a non-gift party. between the two, it is easier for me to do the latter but if this were a no gift party i would have said so.
Anonymous wrote:Look if they are obnoxious enough to say it in such a way that means “we prefer not to bring a gift. Just letting you know!” Then you don’t need their gift anyway. I think that’s pretty obnoxious in the first place. I would be so tempted to say no need to attend...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your children really NEED more stuff?
You sound selfish and greedy. Just tell them to give Larla a gift card.
Tacky
They don’t need piano lessons or clean sheets every week either. There are very few true needs.
Np of course you need clean sheets every week!
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the previous posters that they were not asking about gifts, and answering with "Nope, we're providing pizza and cake!" is completely fine.
However, if we go along with the OP for a minute and assume, based on tone or whatever or the full context of the conversation, that they were hoping you'd offer up a "and no gift needed either!" response - OP, you can ignore that! People who ask questions or make requests in roundabout ways or insinuate things, etc, etc are the easiest thing in the world to ignore - just answer the exact question you were asked and feign that you didn't "get" the subtext. So in that case, the answer of "Nope, we're providing pizza and cake!" is still right. If they just ask "should we bring anything?" feel free to just say "I think we're covered - the play place is handling decor, and we're providing pizza and cake - but thanks so much for the thought!" and don't say a damn word about presents.
People can't "force" you to give an answer you don't want to give, and they certainly can't force an answer when they're not willing to ask the direct question. And since no one is going to walk up to you and say "so do I have to bring a present or what??" you'll be in the clear.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sent out invitations for my kid's birthday (6th) and didn't say it was a no gift party. It's not. I couldn't care less but gifts are an important part of birthday experience for my kids.
Two parents now approached trying to have me say that it was a no gifts party. They are ostensibly asking what to bring but really setting it up in a such a way that I am supposed to say 'oh, nothing'. And I did. But I hate it.
I'd have just smiled and said "Please, do whatever feels right to you." Let them interpret that however they want.
Anonymous wrote:I sent out invitations for my kid's birthday (6th) and didn't say it was a no gift party. It's not. I couldn't care less but gifts are an important part of birthday experience for my kids.
Two parents now approached trying to have me say that it was a no gifts party. They are ostensibly asking what to bring but really setting it up in a such a way that I am supposed to say 'oh, nothing'. And I did. But I hate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your children really NEED more stuff?
You sound selfish and greedy. Just tell them to give Larla a gift card.
Tacky
They don’t need piano lessons or clean sheets every week either. There are very few true needs.
Np of course you need clean sheets every week!
Dp- children living in most of the world aren’t getting a dedicated bed let alone sheets. Most make it to adulthood. Not a necessity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was absolutely made to make me say no gifts. One said “do I need to bring anything (pause) like food...? What do you say to tho? Shopkins?
Seriously?
"Thanks, we've got the food covered, we'll be providing some drinks and snacks/pizzas!"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your children really NEED more stuff?
You sound selfish and greedy. Just tell them to give Larla a gift card.
Tacky
They don’t need piano lessons or clean sheets every week either. There are very few true needs.
Np of course you need clean sheets every week!
Anonymous wrote:OP said the parents asked if it was a no gift party.
The answer is "please do what you are comfortable with."
They did not ask for gift suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do your children really NEED more stuff?
You sound selfish and greedy. Just tell them to give Larla a gift card.
Tacky
They don’t need piano lessons or clean sheets every week either. There are very few true needs.