Anonymous wrote:I am just baffled by these answers. You DECLINED the invitation because you prioritized something else. Now you want the host to accommodate you because you plans changed - if your plans hadn't changed, you still would not be going. Not only that, but in the future you plan to withhold your rsvp to the last minute to see if you might have a better invitation or not. That is very entitled and selfish behavior. Shaking my head that so many people agree that this is okay.
It's totally fine to ask, but if the host is says no, just be graceful and understand that their planning also change due to you declining the invitation in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:My guess is she interpreted this as you B-listing her kid's party and only when your Plan A fell through did you decide you'd have your kid come along, and that offended her.
I wouldn't feel that way and I'd have welcomed your DD unless it was going to pose some huge hardship, but that's my best guess. People are weird and take things personally.
Anonymous wrote:I’m thinking she planned some activities that she bought a certain number of things for. I don’t know like each kid gets a face mask and they are doing a spa treatment. And then each girl gets a nail polish and nail file and they are going to do their nails.
I agree that it’s odd, it’s fair to do but I can’t imagine saying no I would just scramble and figure it out even if I had something like this planned.
You could write back and say if it’s goodie bag related please know my daughter doesn’t mind that at all we know she’d be a late comer! But it’s probably best to let it go..
Anonymous wrote:My DD was invited to a birthday party at a new-ish friend's house. All girls, not a sleepover, fairly small group (guest list was public.) My DD really wanted to go but we were visiting family that weekend that we very rarely see, so we politely declined and stated the reason. Now, our family canceled because they are all sick. I reached out to the mom to explain and see if there was any chance my DD could still come. After a day of silence she wrote back no, that she had already planned everything. I politely told her no worries and that I understood. But I totally don't understand! In the reverse situation we'd have been thrilled to have an invited guest be able to come at the last minute.
If this makes sense to you, could you help me understand? If its about party favors or something, my DD couldn't care less. I don't know the mom very well so can't ask her. My DD will get over it, but I'm still just stunned. There wasn't a deadline to RSVP and the evite is still active. What would she have done if I had just changed the RSVP to yes? I'm not going to obviously.
Anonymous wrote:I’m thinking she planned some activities that she bought a certain number of things for. I don’t know like each kid gets a face mask and they are doing a spa treatment. And then each girl gets a nail polish and nail file and they are going to do their nails.
I agree that it’s odd, it’s fair to do but I can’t imagine saying no I would just scramble and figure it out even if I had something like this planned.
You could write back and say if it’s goodie bag related please know my daughter doesn’t mind that at all we know she’d be a late comer! But it’s probably best to let it go..
Anonymous wrote:My DD was invited to a birthday party at a new-ish friend's house. All girls, not a sleepover, fairly small group (guest list was public.) My DD really wanted to go but we were visiting family that weekend that we very rarely see, so we politely declined and stated the reason. Now, our family canceled because they are all sick. I reached out to the mom to explain and see if there was any chance my DD could still come. After a day of silence she wrote back no, that she had already planned everything. I politely told her no worries and that I understood. But I totally don't understand! In the reverse situation we'd have been thrilled to have an invited guest be able to come at the last minute.
If this makes sense to you, could you help me understand? If its about party favors or something, my DD couldn't care less. I don't know the mom very well so can't ask her. My DD will get over it, but I'm still just stunned. There wasn't a deadline to RSVP and the evite is still active. What would she have done if I had just changed the RSVP to yes? I'm not going to obviously.