Anonymous wrote:You get your thank you when the kid gets the gift and says thank you.
No notes. Wasteful and unnecessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People, people. It's nice to give gifts - not for acknowledgement or status but because you care about the recipient. Whining about not getting a thank you note is almost as rude as directing people to buy a gift card or to not give a gift. I think we have all lost perspective and we are now motivated do these things out of obligation.
If I were to complain about anything, it would be the goodie bag. Please stop with the goodie bag. It's really sending the wrong message in so many ways that I know you don't intend.
I'm asking this with all seriousness b/c I do agree with you to a point, but what do you give your guests as a favor? Nothing? Many small children would be sad to get nothing. How would you explain it to your guests and handle at the party?
I think we the adults have conditioned our children to expect a gift for attending a party. THAT.IS.CRAZY.
All my children bring home are little bags of stuff for the landfill. Cake, ice cream (maybe pizza) is all that's required. Kids just want to play and have sweet treats with their friend.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People, people. It's nice to give gifts - not for acknowledgement or status but because you care about the recipient. Whining about not getting a thank you note is almost as rude as directing people to buy a gift card or to not give a gift. I think we have all lost perspective and we are now motivated do these things out of obligation.
If I were to complain about anything, it would be the goodie bag. Please stop with the goodie bag. It's really sending the wrong message in so many ways that I know you don't intend.
I'm asking this with all seriousness b/c I do agree with you to a point, but what do you give your guests as a favor? Nothing? Many small children would be sad to get nothing. How would you explain it to your guests and handle at the party?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm....how can you forget? Well, my dh works 70 hrs a week and is never home and, I suspect, having an affair. I have 3 young and very busy kids, 2 of whom likely have adhd. I have adhd. I also have a child with a chronic medical condition and mounting debts, and I have a parent w/ Alzheimer's who lives nearby and whose care I am responsible for coordinating, nevermind wanting to spend as much time with as possible before they slip away completely. Sorry I forgot the note. but that how. Thanks, btw, for adding to the stress in my life. Congratulations.
And I am a mother and a wife, a homeowner, have a full-time job with extra hours and a lengthy commute, and a chronic health condition which makes me tired all the time, not to mention plenty of other issues and responsibilities. But I can still manage to send thank you notes. They may not be the most timely, but they still get sent. We all have things going on in our lives that can be used as excuses. Whether or not we choose to do that is what sets us apart.
Hilarious. You call out someone else's sob story, and yet you think your sob story makes it okay to be delinquent with yours? Bha ha ha. You're no more correct than the non-writers. Also, every single manners guru out there says it is a breach not to thank a person for a gift (and actually, in person for a casual gift does the trick for the most established advice mavens) but it's a bigger breach to point out another person's breach of etiquette. Did you know, for instance, if someone begins to eat from the wrong butter plate or drink from the wrong cup that you are supposed to simply do the same rather than point out the other's mistake? It applies across the board. Pointing out bad manners is, well, bad manners.
Plus, most of you seem really, really mean. Is it really worth it to you that a tired, frazzled, frustrated and grieving mom sit down and hand write thank you notes when her sincere thank you in person was offered? Do you really fucking care about that so much that you would sit there and say to yourself, if my dear friend has 5 minutes to herself, I would MUCH rather her sit down and spend her only five minutes writing a note to me rather than have a cup of tea or close her eyes for a minutes. If so, there's a label for that, too, in addition to bad manners. It's called selfish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm....how can you forget? Well, my dh works 70 hrs a week and is never home and, I suspect, having an affair. I have 3 young and very busy kids, 2 of whom likely have adhd. I have adhd. I also have a child with a chronic medical condition and mounting debts, and I have a parent w/ Alzheimer's who lives nearby and whose care I am responsible for coordinating, nevermind wanting to spend as much time with as possible before they slip away completely. Sorry I forgot the note. but that how. Thanks, btw, for adding to the stress in my life. Congratulations.
And I am a mother and a wife, a homeowner, have a full-time job with extra hours and a lengthy commute, and a chronic health condition which makes me tired all the time, not to mention plenty of other issues and responsibilities. But I can still manage to send thank you notes. They may not be the most timely, but they still get sent. We all have things going on in our lives that can be used as excuses. Whether or not we choose to do that is what sets us apart.
Anonymous wrote:
I agree with this, and I, for one, could not give a fuck about receiving or sending thank you notes. I think most cards are waste of paper unless they actually have a personal letter written in them, saying more than just "Thank you for the doll, I like it very much". Sending a whole card and envelope with a stamp and everything is just not necessary when you can say thank you to the person either when you open the present at the party, or if they're not at your party, just say it to them the next time you see them. If someone mailed you a gift, I can see how maybe then a thank you note could be appropriate, but even then I'd rather send an email. I'm not sure why a card is better than an email.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guess I'm in the minority here, but I really don't care if we receive thank you notes. THey go straight into the trash anyway. Knowing everyone one here is so uptight over them, I do send them--knowing full well that eveyone throws them away within seconds. Colossal waste of time and energy all around. Guess it just makes everyone feel all proper and like they're not raising brats, which some are regardless of the "heartfelt" thank you cards.
Actually, we display ours on the mantel for a couple of weeks, so not everyone immediately tosses them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly -- you address the thank you notes at the time time you're addressing the invitations. If you can take the time to make sure DC has friends at the party, you can take the time to thank them for their gift.
I haven't received a paper invitation for a child's birthday party in years...probably not since they were in preschool.
Yes, and it would be wasteful because some percentage don't come to the party or bring a gift!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Exactly -- you address the thank you notes at the time time you're addressing the invitations. If you can take the time to make sure DC has friends at the party, you can take the time to thank them for their gift.
I haven't received a paper invitation for a child's birthday party in years...probably not since they were in preschool.