Anonymous wrote:So for those of you who feel all siblings should attend, what if there are more siblings than available tickets?
I come from a big family, I don't think I went to any of my siblings graduations. That was an adult thing!
Anonymous wrote:Whoever doesn't get to go will be relieved, ha ha.
Anonymous wrote:So for those of you who feel all siblings should attend, what if there are more siblings than available tickets?
I come from a big family, I don't think I went to any of my siblings graduations. That was an adult thing!
Anonymous wrote:So for those of you who feel all siblings should attend, what if there are more siblings than available tickets?
I come from a big family, I don't think I went to any of my siblings graduations. That was an adult thing!
Anonymous wrote:If sibling doesn't want to go, let them stay home. It is a long boring ceremony listening to speeches and watching many many people who you don't know walk across a stage. Grandparents are far more likely to be to enthused about the 30 seconds your son walks than the sibling is. Sibling joins for the party, reception event.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m another one who is surprised that the sibling would not have an automatic ticket.
??? Graduations always have a very limited number of tickets and siblings are never considered. Each graduate usually gets 3 or 4 tickets, no exceptions, because space is so limited at the venue. There might be a mechanism in place for people to donate unused tickets, but without the tickets, families show up with every sibling, grandparent, aunt, uncle, and cousin. Even my 5th grader had a limit of 3 tickets to his graduation this year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My younger would have zero interest in sitting through her brother's graduation. I'd take the grandparents. They will appreciate it a lot more than the sibling.
My thoughts exactly.