Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its rude to put no gifts on an invite. PSA to you.
That’s a very Emily Post, old fashioned attitude. It’s not rude. Nobody wants more crap and I am fine with more and more people deciding not to participate in this farce where parents rush to target the morning of the party to pick out some Marvel junk or else dig around their badger present closet for something they bought on clearance because it’s outdated.
Anonymous wrote:I swear there is a crazy divide between people who live in the suburbs in huge houses and people who live in the city in apartments like me. No gifts is the norm. It's fine.
Anonymous wrote:If you actually were attending many of these parties, you would know that in reality that is not what happens
Anonymous wrote:If you actually were attending many of these parties, you would know that in reality that is not what happens
Right?
Anonymous wrote:I think most people write this to make it easier for people to attend, especially for all class parties where it can be 30 or more kids. We write "no gifts" but understand that some people will still bring something. I don't care either way, and what my kid really wants is a day with friends and some cake.
I think when they are older and the parties are smaller, sure it might make sense for the kids to select meaningful gifts for their besties.
I can't imagine caring a whole lot either way about this topic. I personally do respect the "no gifts" parties and I appreciate getting a pass on figuring out what to get.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its rude to put no gifts on an invite. PSA to you.
That’s a very Emily Post, old fashioned attitude. It’s not rude. Nobody wants more crap and I am fine with more and more people deciding not to participate in this farce where parents rush to target the morning of the party to pick out some Marvel junk or else dig around their badger present closet for something they bought on clearance because it’s outdated.
The rude part is the implication that the host has declared your gift crap which you just verified. Maybe you keep a clearance stash and use whatever is on top but my kids love to pick out a gift for a friend. I know you are sure it is not worthy of your house...so we will not burden you.
Get over yourself. Let parents say no gifts if they don’t want gifts. I’m
happy to have my kid pick out a present for a friend and if someone says no gifts they make a nice card. This isn’t about you so stop making it about you. To me what is worse are the parents who put on the invite what their kid likes/ wants. I find that so tacky!
My 7 year old writes thank you cards to everyone who gives a gift so all the people on here who are so “pro gifts” do you make sure your child handwrites thank you cards to everyone? The thank you card imho is more important than the gift/ no gift.
Now that he’s older he asks for a party elsewhere (amusement park, show, etc) where we only invite 2 close friends because it’s expensive and don’t own a van
People need to stop taking things so personally. It isn’t about you or your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its rude to put no gifts on an invite. PSA to you.
That’s a very Emily Post, old fashioned attitude. It’s not rude. Nobody wants more crap and I am fine with more and more people deciding not to participate in this farce where parents rush to target the morning of the party to pick out some Marvel junk or else dig around their badger present closet for something they bought on clearance because it’s outdated.
The rude part is the implication that the host has declared your gift crap which you just verified. Maybe you keep a clearance stash and use whatever is on top but my kids love to pick out a gift for a friend. I know you are sure it is not worthy of your house...so we will not burden you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its rude to put no gifts on an invite. PSA to you.
That’s a very Emily Post, old fashioned attitude. It’s not rude. Nobody wants more crap and I am fine with more and more people deciding not to participate in this farce where parents rush to target the morning of the party to pick out some Marvel junk or else dig around their badger present closet for something they bought on clearance because it’s outdated.
The rude part is the implication that the host has declared your gift crap which you just verified. Maybe you keep a clearance stash and use whatever is on top but my kids love to pick out a gift for a friend. I know you are sure it is not worthy of your house...so we will not burden you.
My kids don't want the impulsive junk your kids pick out.
You are raising nasty snobs. Don't have a party then. My kids don't want to go to the dumb party you hosted that they have no interest in but go to make you happy.
Genuine question: where do you live? And what are your other demographics?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its rude to put no gifts on an invite. PSA to you.
That’s a very Emily Post, old fashioned attitude. It’s not rude. Nobody wants more crap and I am fine with more and more people deciding not to participate in this farce where parents rush to target the morning of the party to pick out some Marvel junk or else dig around their badger present closet for something they bought on clearance because it’s outdated.
The rude part is the implication that the host has declared your gift crap which you just verified. Maybe you keep a clearance stash and use whatever is on top but my kids love to pick out a gift for a friend. I know you are sure it is not worthy of your house...so we will not burden you.
My kids don't want the impulsive junk your kids pick out.
You are raising nasty snobs. Don't have a party then. My kids don't want to go to the dumb party you hosted that they have no interest in but go to make you happy.
Anonymous wrote:Please boycott the party if you don't like the conditions. Everybody wins.