Anonymous wrote:I’m going to ask my kid if they want to attend. They are currently in school. I’ll ask tonight and respond when I remember.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they want to ask their kid if they want to go
Because they have to talk to their spouse, look at their calendar, figure out which parent will take kid A to the party and which will take kid B to the soccer game
They need to remember what weekend grandma said she would show up.
They are on their mobile and want to wait until they are at their desktop so they can add it to their google calendar
They can't remember who your kid is and need to look at the class photo
They need to carpool with another family and need to see who is going first
This. There can be lots to coordinate
Exactly and frankly, your child's birthday party is not my top priority.
If it’s so low down your list, why even put that much mental energy into it? Just click no. Send regrets.
I find it hilarious that no one has the time to click no on an evite, but can post about it on DCUM.
NP. OP was complaining about people who wait to respond or who open an invitation and (gasp!) don't immediately know whether they can attend. People may not open your evite with five minutes of you sending it for a variety of reasons, some of which were listed above. If OP was asking why people never open it, that's a different story. So settle down.
Follow the bouncing ball. OP is complaining about people opening and then needing more than a week to respond.
If sports are that important to your family, that you will wait until the last minute for a change. then respond no to parties.
Well, you're a peach. To be honest, I don't really care if I annoy people like you.
Anonymous wrote:It's before the RSVP date, right? Why do you care?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I should have listed RSVP by date. The parties that we have been invited to do not have RSVP by dates. I wasn’t sure if it’s acceptable to.
My complaint is about people who don’t bother to RSVP. For instance, one of the moms told me at another party that they will be out of town starting x date. My party is after the date. Why not rsvp no? I just don’t get it. It has been one week, and more than half the ppl hasn’t responded and the majority of them don’t have more than 1 kid. In fact, the ones with multiple kids seemed to actually respond.
Is it acceptable to add the rsvp by date now? I would have to send a msg to say that isn’t it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they want to ask their kid if they want to go
Because they have to talk to their spouse, look at their calendar, figure out which parent will take kid A to the party and which will take kid B to the soccer game
They need to remember what weekend grandma said she would show up.
They are on their mobile and want to wait until they are at their desktop so they can add it to their google calendar
They can't remember who your kid is and need to look at the class photo
They need to carpool with another family and need to see who is going first
This. There can be lots to coordinate
Exactly and frankly, your child's birthday party is not my top priority.
If it’s so low down your list, why even put that much mental energy into it? Just click no. Send regrets.
I find it hilarious that no one has the time to click no on an evite, but can post about it on DCUM.
NP. OP was complaining about people who wait to respond or who open an invitation and (gasp!) don't immediately know whether they can attend. People may not open your evite with five minutes of you sending it for a variety of reasons, some of which were listed above. If OP was asking why people never open it, that's a different story. So settle down.
Follow the bouncing ball. OP is complaining about people opening and then needing more than a week to respond.
If sports are that important to your family, that you will wait until the last minute for a change. then respond no to parties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they want to ask their kid if they want to go
Because they have to talk to their spouse, look at their calendar, figure out which parent will take kid A to the party and which will take kid B to the soccer game
They need to remember what weekend grandma said she would show up.
They are on their mobile and want to wait until they are at their desktop so they can add it to their google calendar
They can't remember who your kid is and need to look at the class photo
They need to carpool with another family and need to see who is going first
This. There can be lots to coordinate
Exactly and frankly, your child's birthday party is not my top priority.
If it’s so low down your list, why even put that much mental energy into it? Just click no. Send regrets.
I find it hilarious that no one has the time to click no on an evite, but can post about it on DCUM.
NP. OP was complaining about people who wait to respond or who open an invitation and (gasp!) don't immediately know whether they can attend. People may not open your evite with five minutes of you sending it for a variety of reasons, some of which were listed above. If OP was asking why people never open it, that's a different story. So settle down.