Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people are having a very hard time understanding that traditions die out. No one is asking why kids don’t play pin the tail on the donkey at parties anymore. Party hats used to be omnipresent. Anyone remember “button button who has the button”?Or pass the parcel? If it’s not good, it dies out. Even the birthday cake has changed over time - cupcakes, donuts, cookies are acceptable.
Okay - but opening presents at a birthday party, and giving/receiving gifts, are both traditions that happen at most birthday parties, once you get past the invite-absolutely-everyone phase of life.
Obviously opening presents and even giving/receiving gifts is not as common as it used to be. Many parties request no gifts these day - did you ever encounter that in your childhood? I didn’t. There are traditions that are dying out that I am sad about, but it is what it is. It’s hard to hear it, but we are no longer the generation deciding how traditions will evolve.
Anonymous wrote:Because it’s boring AF to watch someone else open gifts, and it makes kids jealous or makes the gifter feel badly when the kid gets a duplicate or tosses the gift aside. Most people give gift cards anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people are having a very hard time understanding that traditions die out. No one is asking why kids don’t play pin the tail on the donkey at parties anymore. Party hats used to be omnipresent. Anyone remember “button button who has the button”?Or pass the parcel? If it’s not good, it dies out. Even the birthday cake has changed over time - cupcakes, donuts, cookies are acceptable.
Okay - but opening presents at a birthday party, and giving/receiving gifts, are both traditions that happen at most birthday parties, once you get past the invite-absolutely-everyone phase of life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a four year old and we’ve never been to a party that didn’t say “no gifts,” I’m hoping the trend continues!!
Similar, I’ve only been to on non no-gifts party
This must be regional. I don’t live in the DMV and we’ve never been to a no-gift party or heard it talked about.
Agree. I live in California. Gifts are the norm, and if the party is small kids will open the presents there. There is no hand-wringing.
In the DMV it is more common to do a no gifts party. If people bring gifts anyway it would be extremely rude to open them in front of other guests who didn’t bring gifts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a four year old and we’ve never been to a party that didn’t say “no gifts,” I’m hoping the trend continues!!
Similar, I’ve only been to on non no-gifts party
This must be regional. I don’t live in the DMV and we’ve never been to a no-gift party or heard it talked about.
Agree. I live in California. Gifts are the norm, and if the party is small kids will open the presents there. There is no hand-wringing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When we were kids most parties were at home. There wasn't much to do other than sign happy birthday, eat cake, and play. Opening gifts was an activity that helped kill time. Most of the parties nowadays are either at some location (laser tag, bowling, etc), but even at home, they are a lot more structured. My kid went to an at-home party where they played outdoor laser tag; another time there was a video game van parked in front of the house and all the kids gamed. There's less time now for things like opening gifts.
Agree, the kids would rather play games or whatever the activity is. More fun than sitting around watching the kid open gifts.
Is this your justification? Because it isn't true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When we were kids most parties were at home. There wasn't much to do other than sign happy birthday, eat cake, and play. Opening gifts was an activity that helped kill time. Most of the parties nowadays are either at some location (laser tag, bowling, etc), but even at home, they are a lot more structured. My kid went to an at-home party where they played outdoor laser tag; another time there was a video game van parked in front of the house and all the kids gamed. There's less time now for things like opening gifts.
Agree, the kids would rather play games or whatever the activity is. More fun than sitting around watching the kid open gifts.
Anonymous wrote:When we were kids most parties were at home. There wasn't much to do other than sign happy birthday, eat cake, and play. Opening gifts was an activity that helped kill time. Most of the parties nowadays are either at some location (laser tag, bowling, etc), but even at home, they are a lot more structured. My kid went to an at-home party where they played outdoor laser tag; another time there was a video game van parked in front of the house and all the kids gamed. There's less time now for things like opening gifts.
Anonymous wrote:Some people are having a very hard time understanding that traditions die out. No one is asking why kids don’t play pin the tail on the donkey at parties anymore. Party hats used to be omnipresent. Anyone remember “button button who has the button”?Or pass the parcel? If it’s not good, it dies out. Even the birthday cake has changed over time - cupcakes, donuts, cookies are acceptable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because it’s boring AF to watch someone else open gifts, and it makes kids jealous or makes the gifter feel badly when the kid gets a duplicate or tosses the gift aside. Most people give gift cards anyway.
Most people do not give gift cards, at least not the parties I go to. There’s always a pile of wrapped or bagged gifts.