Anonymous wrote:I would 100% not make my teen go, especially for a party that's not just family/extended family. Will said 16 year be spending quality time with her 5 year old cousin at this party? I highly doubt it. It doesn't sound like this is going to be a family bonding event for her.
I think family members can show up for each other in other ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She should go if she doesn’t have another commitment. Man, teenagers can be so difficult. Little kids love having big kids at their parties. We just had our DC’s 5th birthday yesterday and our 14 yo played with all the kids and the little kids genuinely loved it. It’s a little bratty for her to refuse to go, imo.
Irrelevant.
It’s only irrelevant if your bratty teenager doesn’t care about her extended family lol!
Anonymous wrote:She should go if she doesn’t have another commitment. Man, teenagers can be so difficult. Little kids love having big kids at their parties. We just had our DC’s 5th birthday yesterday and our 14 yo played with all the kids and the little kids genuinely loved it. It’s a little bratty for her to refuse to go, imo.
Anonymous wrote:This is why old people in America get stuck in nursing homes. We no longer value family. OP is upset that husband is “choosing” this party of their daughter’s game? The teenager does not want to go? My oldest son is 17 and our two youngest are 6 and 7. The 17 year old goes to the younger kids parties be it his siblings or younger family members. He does not complain. Is he happy to go? No… does he deal with it? Yes… it’s about making memories and connections. The day is not about OP’s daughter and her feelings. She can put that aside along with her enjoyment for a couple of hours. She can help out for a couple of hours.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The party is at my sister-in-law's house.
She's also miserable because she ends up babysitting a bunch of younger kids. Our other niece who is a teenager will not be there. We see them often so it's not like a rare occasion or anything.
She’s 16
Your husband wants to look good by offering his daughter as free labor and pretending that he’s raised such a family oriented kid that this is no big deal.
She does all the work and he gets all the credit.
It’s past time you stand up for your kid. If he makes her go, tell her to not do anything extra. She’s a guest. She’s not a babysitter. And she especially shouldn’t be doing more work than your husband. Tell her to take a page out of every lazy dad’s playbook and “go to the bathroom” whenever there’s a demand for kid wrangling. Stay there for at least 30 minutes (or if there’s only one bathroom just stand outside the door and take her time coming back.) Also give her permission to take a “call” from you if she feels stuck, so she has an excuse to step outside and use the phone in private.
Exactly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She should go if she doesn’t have another commitment. Man, teenagers can be so difficult. Little kids love having big kids at their parties. We just had our DC’s 5th birthday yesterday and our 14 yo played with all the kids and the little kids genuinely loved it. It’s a little bratty for her to refuse to go, imo.
Irrelevant.
It’s only irrelevant if your bratty teenager doesn’t care about her extended family lol!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She should go if she doesn’t have another commitment. Man, teenagers can be so difficult. Little kids love having big kids at their parties. We just had our DC’s 5th birthday yesterday and our 14 yo played with all the kids and the little kids genuinely loved it. It’s a little bratty for her to refuse to go, imo.
Irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why old people in America get stuck in nursing homes. We no longer value family. OP is upset that husband is “choosing” this party of their daughter’s game? The teenager does not want to go? My oldest son is 17 and our two youngest are 6 and 7. The 17 year old goes to the younger kids parties be it his siblings or younger family members. He does not complain. Is he happy to go? No… does he deal with it? Yes… it’s about making memories and connections. The day is not about OP’s daughter and her feelings. She can put that aside along with her enjoyment for a couple of hours. She can help out for a couple of hours.
Why should the girl martyr herself to attend a 5yr olds party with her 5yr old friends? The parents are the hosts and should do all the work. This isn’t a family gathering.
Anonymous wrote:This is why old people in America get stuck in nursing homes. We no longer value family. OP is upset that husband is “choosing” this party of their daughter’s game? The teenager does not want to go? My oldest son is 17 and our two youngest are 6 and 7. The 17 year old goes to the younger kids parties be it his siblings or younger family members. He does not complain. Is he happy to go? No… does he deal with it? Yes… it’s about making memories and connections. The day is not about OP’s daughter and her feelings. She can put that aside along with her enjoyment for a couple of hours. She can help out for a couple of hours.
Anonymous wrote:This is why old people in America get stuck in nursing homes. We no longer value family. OP is upset that husband is “choosing” this party of their daughter’s game? The teenager does not want to go? My oldest son is 17 and our two youngest are 6 and 7. The 17 year old goes to the younger kids parties be it his siblings or younger family members. He does not complain. Is he happy to go? No… does he deal with it? Yes… it’s about making memories and connections. The day is not about OP’s daughter and her feelings. She can put that aside along with her enjoyment for a couple of hours. She can help out for a couple of hours.
Anonymous wrote:This is why old people in America get stuck in nursing homes. We no longer value family. OP is upset that husband is “choosing” this party of their daughter’s game? The teenager does not want to go? My oldest son is 17 and our two youngest are 6 and 7. The 17 year old goes to the younger kids parties be it his siblings or younger family members. He does not complain. Is he happy to go? No… does he deal with it? Yes… it’s about making memories and connections. The day is not about OP’s daughter and her feelings. She can put that aside along with her enjoyment for a couple of hours. She can help out for a couple of hours.