Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dear lord. Only on Dcum is giving a baby cake considered 'trashy.'
Why are people SO obsessed with class here? I don't get it.
Because so many people are trashy and classless. Not in this example necessarily but in many others. "Class" has moved in meaning beyond social classes and now represents a grace and way of carrying yourself that has nothing to do with income or education.
Anonymous wrote:Dear lord. Only on Dcum is giving a baby cake considered 'trashy.'
Why are people SO obsessed with class here? I don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't know that a birthday cake had an intent.
Plus now I'm having flashbacks to my college literature classes.
Anonymous wrote:
Impractical? yes.
Trashy? no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can only imagine the social anxiety experienced by people who think about whether it is trashy or tacky to give a kid cake to smash on their birthday.
Uhhh... What?
Judgments about trashiness/tackiness are really judgments about social position. To me, thinking about the social implications of your child's reaction to cake is like thinking about plucking your baby's eyebrows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can only imagine the social anxiety experienced by people who think about whether it is trashy or tacky to give a kid cake to smash on their birthday.
Uhhh... What?
Anonymous wrote:I can only imagine the social anxiety experienced by people who think about whether it is trashy or tacky to give a kid cake to smash on their birthday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not fond of this practice and didn't do it for DD's first birthday. We helped her blow out her candles and she got the first piece of her birthday cake - just like every subsequent year - and shared her cake with her guests (which is the point of birthday cake in the first place). I don't like seeing a blatant and planned waste of food and I like the original concept of a shared birthday wish so much more than a separate "stunt cake" for the baby. DD ate her first piece of birthday cake and we have cute photographs to remember the messy moment.
I loathe seeing a bride and groom smash wedding cake into each other's faces, too.
I don't think the practice of giving a one-year-old a cake to smash up is "trashy" - just so common and unnecessary.
I do love the original idea that a birthday cake or wedding cake is the shared sweetness and shared wishes of all the assembled guests. Which is one of the two reasons I never turn down birthday or wedding cake (the other being that I love cake!) I want to share their happiness. You're right - a "stunt cake" defeats the purpose.
Thanks - DS is only 9 months old but in three months I will make sure to give him the first piece of his birthday cake and share the rest with his friends and family.
So, would cupcakes also defeat the purpose? Because that's what I did. My son ate it like there was no tomorrow. Very little mess because he wanted it all in his mouth.
Anonymous wrote:I can only imagine the social anxiety experienced by people who think about whether it is trashy or tacky to give a kid cake to smash on their birthday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not fond of this practice and didn't do it for DD's first birthday. We helped her blow out her candles and she got the first piece of her birthday cake - just like every subsequent year - and shared her cake with her guests (which is the point of birthday cake in the first place). I don't like seeing a blatant and planned waste of food and I like the original concept of a shared birthday wish so much more than a separate "stunt cake" for the baby. DD ate her first piece of birthday cake and we have cute photographs to remember the messy moment.
I loathe seeing a bride and groom smash wedding cake into each other's faces, too.
I don't think the practice of giving a one-year-old a cake to smash up is "trashy" - just so common and unnecessary.
I do love the original idea that a birthday cake or wedding cake is the shared sweetness and shared wishes of all the assembled guests. Which is one of the two reasons I never turn down birthday or wedding cake (the other being that I love cake!) I want to share their happiness. You're right - a "stunt cake" defeats the purpose.
Thanks - DS is only 9 months old but in three months I will make sure to give him the first piece of his birthday cake and share the rest with his friends and family.