Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would talk to Larlas mother. It may be that only girls were invited and that's why he was left off. Or that she dowes the know they are friends.
Fwiw, you will be told by others that it is rude. However, if it were my child's birthday and they had invited friends at school that weren't on the evite, I'd like to know and I would extend the invitation since the birthday child obviously wants their friend invited.
This happened to us. I called the mother to let her know the birthday child invited us. She was mortified
and then lied to say it was a small party for just family. It was several years ago and still makes me so sad.
You can call to see but I would make fun backup plans, as well. The girl sounds sweet --
Maybe invite her for a play date to celebrate her birthday again?
I'm so sorry. It is painful for parent and child.
Wow, I think it's rude that you called her and put her in such an awkward spot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our SN son who is in an inclusion classroom in 1st grade has been talking a lot about his classmate Larla's upcoming birthday party. Larla is an amazingly sweet child who is very warm and caring to my son despite his issues. He says Larla invited him several times and I'm sure she did since he had the date and the venue.
Unfortunately he was actually not invited. Another parent who is a friend checked the Evite and our son was not on the list so there's no chance of a misplaced email or something.
I have been hoping DS would forget about the party but he can read the calendar and knows it's coming up. Plus it's likely Larla will be talking about it at some point in class after she has had the party as she is a very talkative girl.
What should I do? Should I tell him up front that he's not invited and that you don't always get invited to everything? Seems kind of young for that kind of talk and in his mind he was invited by the girl even though the mother did not include him. Should I schedule a trip to go out of town on that weekend so that I can tell him we wouldn't be able to go anyway? He may throw a fit but we could cheer him up by going to visit our in-laws or something like that.
When my HFA DC was in 1st grade several boys told him that he was invited to their birthday parties, but he never was. It was part of the social dynamic in that class and my DC was on the bottom. It was a very hard year.
It could also mean the kids liked him and it was just a parent issue!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our SN son who is in an inclusion classroom in 1st grade has been talking a lot about his classmate Larla's upcoming birthday party. Larla is an amazingly sweet child who is very warm and caring to my son despite his issues. He says Larla invited him several times and I'm sure she did since he had the date and the venue.
Unfortunately he was actually not invited. Another parent who is a friend checked the Evite and our son was not on the list so there's no chance of a misplaced email or something.
I have been hoping DS would forget about the party but he can read the calendar and knows it's coming up. Plus it's likely Larla will be talking about it at some point in class after she has had the party as she is a very talkative girl.
What should I do? Should I tell him up front that he's not invited and that you don't always get invited to everything? Seems kind of young for that kind of talk and in his mind he was invited by the girl even though the mother did not include him. Should I schedule a trip to go out of town on that weekend so that I can tell him we wouldn't be able to go anyway? He may throw a fit but we could cheer him up by going to visit our in-laws or something like that.
When my HFA DC was in 1st grade several boys told him that he was invited to their birthday parties, but he never was. It was part of the social dynamic in that class and my DC was on the bottom. It was a very hard year.
Anonymous wrote:There are lots of tacky parents out there. My niece has Downs Syndrome-so a really obvious disability but is a super sweet kid. A few months ago, some asshole parent invited every girl in the class to a party at the American Girl store except her. She was the only girl not invited.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a third party mom you know who could ask? Someone who knows the other mom and can get the "yes/no" without you having to call directly?
See up thread. The OP already had a friend check the list.
She checked the list, but did she talk to the other mom to say "hey, Larla's been talking up this party and she invited Larlo"? Gives everyone some kind of out - OP doesn't have to ask directly, host mom can pretend to have "lost the e-mail address" and if the host mom really is horrible, then we know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a third party mom you know who could ask? Someone who knows the other mom and can get the "yes/no" without you having to call directly?
See up thread. The OP already had a friend check the list.
She checked the list, but did she talk to the other mom to say "hey, Larla's been talking up this party and she invited Larlo"? Gives everyone some kind of out - OP doesn't have to ask directly, host mom can pretend to have "lost the e-mail address" and if the host mom really is horrible, then we know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there a third party mom you know who could ask? Someone who knows the other mom and can get the "yes/no" without you having to call directly?
See up thread. The OP already had a friend check the list.
Anonymous wrote:Our SN son who is in an inclusion classroom in 1st grade has been talking a lot about his classmate Larla's upcoming birthday party. Larla is an amazingly sweet child who is very warm and caring to my son despite his issues. He says Larla invited him several times and I'm sure she did since he had the date and the venue.
Unfortunately he was actually not invited. Another parent who is a friend checked the Evite and our son was not on the list so there's no chance of a misplaced email or something.
I have been hoping DS would forget about the party but he can read the calendar and knows it's coming up. Plus it's likely Larla will be talking about it at some point in class after she has had the party as she is a very talkative girl.
What should I do? Should I tell him up front that he's not invited and that you don't always get invited to everything? Seems kind of young for that kind of talk and in his mind he was invited by the girl even though the mother did not include him. Should I schedule a trip to go out of town on that weekend so that I can tell him we wouldn't be able to go anyway? He may throw a fit but we could cheer him up by going to visit our in-laws or something like that.