Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm probably the outlier on this - I have an only child, but if someone didn't expect a sibling to eat food that I provided, be paid for by me at a venue, or get a loot bag, I would not feel the need for them to tell me anything about the sibling. They can pay for them, feed them, and entertain them themselves without notice to me.
100% this. Why are you ladies freaking out? There will probably be 100 other kids there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see how this covert going with a sibling but not announcing yourself even works. Every party I've taken my kids to, I go to the party room, say hello to the parents, my kid drops off a gift, and from there I let them know if I'm dropping off or staying. If I had another child with me they would be right there. There's no way to do this without the host seeing you. Are you pretending you are leaving and then just staying with the sibling lurking out of sight?
I don't think we are suggesting that OP has to be "covert". There just isn't a need to communicate about this ahead of time because she won't be having the sibling participate in the party.
Anonymous wrote:I just want to point out on wanting that no one ever considers an option - if you don’t want to drop off your kid, but also have no means of not bringing the sibling, you can decline the invitation. It’s not a summons.
Anonymous wrote:I don't see how this covert going with a sibling but not announcing yourself even works. Every party I've taken my kids to, I go to the party room, say hello to the parents, my kid drops off a gift, and from there I let them know if I'm dropping off or staying. If I had another child with me they would be right there. There's no way to do this without the host seeing you. Are you pretending you are leaving and then just staying with the sibling lurking out of sight?
Anonymous wrote:OP again!
Its a public place...Scramble in Falls church. Its huge and often a madhouse with multiple parties on weekends which is part of why i hesitate to do drop off. And no I wouldn't presume to invite my younger to the party or expect food/goodie bag/cake but thought I could keep him entertained in the toddler area and still keep an eye on his brother who will be presumably be playing with his friends. In addition to this being our first drop off option party, its also the first where it didn't say "siblings welcome!"
Anyway, thanks for everyone's opinions!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on goody bags fascinating. My kid gets to play with it in the car and then it goes in the trash as soon as we get home. No one wants the candy and plastic junk.
Our party favors tend to be things like a book, a craft that the kids make during the party, or a small stuffed animal. I don't buy little plastic junk, and the kids usually seem genuinely excited by the favors. Instead of a bag of plastic junk, we buy one nicer thing, which is why I don't get extras.
We’ve gotten books and stuffed animals (which honestly I also toss bc they’re either cheap, extra clutter, or we already have plenty of both). I just wish we’d move away from the party favor culture - it’s just wasteful. And that seems to be the driving factor on here of “oh but I don’t have enough favors”. The best party “favor” I’ve seen is where the birthday girl donated to the manatees (or dolphins I can’t remember) and gave everyone a pencil with the animal and foundation on it.
Teach your kids to simply say "No, thank you."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on goody bags fascinating. My kid gets to play with it in the car and then it goes in the trash as soon as we get home. No one wants the candy and plastic junk.
Our party favors tend to be things like a book, a craft that the kids make during the party, or a small stuffed animal. I don't buy little plastic junk, and the kids usually seem genuinely excited by the favors. Instead of a bag of plastic junk, we buy one nicer thing, which is why I don't get extras.
We’ve gotten books and stuffed animals (which honestly I also toss bc they’re either cheap, extra clutter, or we already have plenty of both). I just wish we’d move away from the party favor culture - it’s just wasteful. And that seems to be the driving factor on here of “oh but I don’t have enough favors”. The best party “favor” I’ve seen is where the birthday girl donated to the manatees (or dolphins I can’t remember) and gave everyone a pencil with the animal and foundation on it.
Anonymous wrote:You all are ridiculous. Are you really telling someone she shouldn’t bring her 2.5 year old to a PUBLIC PLACE?
OP - if your six year does not require you to be in their sight at all times, take and pay for your toddler, and do not give this a second thought. Do not take your younger child into the party room.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on goody bags fascinating. My kid gets to play with it in the car and then it goes in the trash as soon as we get home. No one wants the candy and plastic junk.
Our party favors tend to be things like a book, a craft that the kids make during the party, or a small stuffed animal. I don't buy little plastic junk, and the kids usually seem genuinely excited by the favors. Instead of a bag of plastic junk, we buy one nicer thing, which is why I don't get extras.
We’ve gotten books and stuffed animals (which honestly I also toss bc they’re either cheap, extra clutter, or we already have plenty of both). I just wish we’d move away from the party favor culture - it’s just wasteful. And that seems to be the driving factor on here of “oh but I don’t have enough favors”. The best party “favor” I’ve seen is where the birthday girl donated to the manatees (or dolphins I can’t remember) and gave everyone a pencil with the animal and foundation on it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on goody bags fascinating. My kid gets to play with it in the car and then it goes in the trash as soon as we get home. No one wants the candy and plastic junk.
Our party favors tend to be things like a book, a craft that the kids make during the party, or a small stuffed animal. I don't buy little plastic junk, and the kids usually seem genuinely excited by the favors. Instead of a bag of plastic junk, we buy one nicer thing, which is why I don't get extras.
Anonymous wrote:I find the focus on goody bags fascinating. My kid gets to play with it in the car and then it goes in the trash as soon as we get home. No one wants the candy and plastic junk.