Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay, we've established that I won't be sending out an e-vite for the restaurant portion. Just the house party portion.
So maybe I'll just send out an email about both, mentioning the getting together for dinner part and then the house party part. Or would that still be possibly offensive because of the restaurant part? Honestly, this whole thing doesn't seem like that big a deal to me and I had no idea it would come off this way. If it weren't for my sister mentioning this to me about possibly being offensive, it would have never occurred to me. If I received an evite for a group dinner at a restaurant I would assume it was dutch.
I just want to do something special for DH, because this is a big birthday for him (40th) and I want it to be special. But we don't have enough seating for a potluck dinner at home. Is a potluck dinner offensive too? I just got invited to a birthday potluck 40th by evite, is it offensive that the hostess asked everyone to contribute an entree dish?
My husband paid for dinner for 25 people at a restaurant for my 40th birthday. Why don't you just pay?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If its a 40th birthday why not pay for the dinner OP? It should be a big celebration...
Well I guess I could. Honestly though I have been unemployed for 10 months (and job searching) and all our friends know this. So it wasn't my first choice for financial reasons. I suppose we could do it though.
Maybe I should just forget this whole idea. Almost seems more trouble than it's worth, given the reactions on this thread. Now I'm thinking I'm going to offend someone no matter what I do.
Anonymous wrote:OP i think you need to skip doing a dinner out for your husband, with anyone other than the two of you. You can't invite people at all, evite or not, to his birthday dinner and expect them to pay for themselves. Even though you're unemployed, people are going to be surprised when you don't pay, and they'll talk about it, although probably not to your face.
Can you have people over for appetizers and drinks?
Anonymous wrote:Op, what is the "norm" for your group when it comes to birthday dinners?
Anonymous wrote:Okay, we've established that I won't be sending out an e-vite for the restaurant portion. Just the house party portion.
So maybe I'll just send out an email about both, mentioning the getting together for dinner part and then the house party part. Or would that still be possibly offensive because of the restaurant part? Honestly, this whole thing doesn't seem like that big a deal to me and I had no idea it would come off this way. If it weren't for my sister mentioning this to me about possibly being offensive, it would have never occurred to me. If I received an evite for a group dinner at a restaurant I would assume it was dutch.
I just want to do something special for DH, because this is a big birthday for him (40th) and I want it to be special. But we don't have enough seating for a potluck dinner at home. Is a potluck dinner offensive too? I just got invited to a birthday potluck 40th by evite, is it offensive that the hostess asked everyone to contribute an entree dish?
Anonymous wrote:OP, the logistics of dinner out and then party back at your house are odd anyway. I would be annoyed at having to drive/metro to dinner, then get back to your house. Why does the party have to be in 2 locations? I think you should just do a later evening cake/snack/drinks at your house and call it a day.
Are you going to get everything set for the party before dinner and then go back to the house and make guest stand around and wait while you scramble to open bottles of wine, heat food, cut the cake, etc?
It is clear by your initial plan that you must not entertain a lot and have not thought through the logistics.
Anonymous wrote:We just had a similar experience. Invited to a b-day party by a couple. Husband and wife are both well-employed. Had a nice time, then got the $150 bill (they split it evenly, not taking into account what people ate). When in my 20s and single, I'd assume dutch, but at 35, employed and when invited, I was shocked. We still like the couple, but it just seems ungracious. As we are struggling financially, had I expected this, I probably would have declined dinner and asked if we could meet up with them afterwards at the bar (we ended up not going to the bar, bc we'd just spent our weekly food budget!).
But don't go broke and pay for everyone! Just do the cake part, or do something cute like "40 on paper; 14 at heart" and have everyone meet at a pizza restaurant or tacky/funny type of place that 14 year old boys go after soccer games, or a bowling alley, and pay for everyone.