Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do they need "snacks"? Can't the kids eat at home? I don't want my child to go over and be offered junk foods that we don't normally eat at home. Oh well maybe I will teach them that. But still, these "snack" motive must be part of american culture and sounds weird to me. They are not coming for the party so I would not worry about "snacks".
I guarantee that if you forbid your kids from eating junk food and other things you don’t have at home they will go out of their way to sneak it. And will possibly end up with disordered attitudes about food. Good luck with that.
What distorted attitudes will they have? That they should eat healthy food? Oh brother.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do they need "snacks"? Can't the kids eat at home? I don't want my child to go over and be offered junk foods that we don't normally eat at home. Oh well maybe I will teach them that. But still, these "snack" motive must be part of american culture and sounds weird to me. They are not coming for the party so I would not worry about "snacks".
You obviously don’t have teenagers
Anonymous wrote:PP. your food sounds much better. By "snacks" I mean junk food like chips, sugar-packed cookies, sodas, anything that is super processed/packed with cancer causing preservatives. I am from central European country and find it hard that kids (and people in general) here don't drink tea but have these non-stop snacking habits. My kids are used to "tea-time" between meals, and we bake often. I also make crepes almost every weekend. After 3-4 hrs without food a child of any age should have a meal, and not a peanut butter sandwich (what a horrible thing to eat anyway). I am always glad when kids stop by but I do not offer snacks, they are offered to have lunch together with my child, or any part of it they want to eat.
Just a thought, maybe kids are attracted to "hang-out house" because of those snacks that are tasty but unhealthy and they know it's the only place where they can get it, and kids of any age are known for their talents to make bad choices.
Anonymous wrote:Why do they need "snacks"? Can't the kids eat at home? I don't want my child to go over and be offered junk foods that we don't normally eat at home. Oh well maybe I will teach them that. But still, these "snack" motive must be part of american culture and sounds weird to me. They are not coming for the party so I would not worry about "snacks".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do they need "snacks"? Can't the kids eat at home? I don't want my child to go over and be offered junk foods that we don't normally eat at home. Oh well maybe I will teach them that. But still, these "snack" motive must be part of american culture and sounds weird to me. They are not coming for the party so I would not worry about "snacks".
You must be a real pill at parties When you go to someone's house they never offer you food or drink? Where are you from that you don't eat? And why is "snacks" in quotes. What would you envision instead? A three course meal?
YIKES
Anonymous wrote:-the parent who is present is fun, funny, and shows interest in the kids. You don't have to give the kids alcohol to be cool.
-lots of food. let everyone eat. fill the fridge with drinks and the pantry with snacks.
-sports equipment (basketball hoop, volleyball net)
-good tv/hangout room where kids can be loud
-be relaxed about rules/cleanliness. No white carpets and sofa. No freaking out if a lamp gets broken accidentally.
-Pets are always interesting
-honestly some of it is just location. If your house happens to be centrally located among a group of friends , it's more likely to be a hangout house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I got to third base in 8th grade at the "hang out house"
That seems like a you problem not necessarily the houses problem. Keep your clothes in the 8th grade. Jesus.
Anonymous wrote:I got to third base in 8th grade at the "hang out house"