Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your teen DD owns a home? I think the general advice is to go away the weekend of your open house. Or is this college orientation? Why are you involved in this anyway? Sure, I'd be sad I was missing out if I was your DD but that's life.
12th grade graduation. The group of friends is really clean cut, too. Good clean fun.
What does this have to do with anything?
Anonymous wrote:^Actually looks like they have Fri-Mon. So Op's daughter would drive and get to the beach house on Friday. She would leave Saturday morning to drive home for the party and she would get back around 8:00 on Sat night. She would then have a full day Sunday and she would return home on Monday.
That would be more doable because of the full day on Sunday. But Saturday would be one slog of a day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP here. Forgot to add that I personally wouldn't consider an RSVP necessary or meaningful for an "open house". By definition, it means people can come and go as they want and they're not obligated to attend. Doesn't it?
It is always nice to RSVP so the host can get a rough idea how much food to purchase.
Anonymous wrote:PP here. Forgot to add that I personally wouldn't consider an RSVP necessary or meaningful for an "open house". By definition, it means people can come and go as they want and they're not obligated to attend. Doesn't it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am I understanding this right?
* Your family wanted to celebrate the achievement (?) of your daughter getting to the end of high school, so they decide to have a gathering at your house with the whole family
* You call it an "open house"
* Her friends were invited to stop by sometime during the open house
* This open house is for your daughter, it's about her, it's not a "graduation party" for the whole class or even a group of her friends
* Her friends' families may or may not decide to have an "open house" for their extended families for their own children, that their kids' friends are also invited to stop by
* the kids usually move between these open houses on the same day
* nobody wanted to go to your daughter's open house because they are off celebrating their own graduations in way that they think is fun, and they think that a summer beach vacation is more fun than a tea party making small talk with your extended family to celebrate your daughter's achievement when they actually all just "achieved" (?) the exact same thing.
What am I missing or misunderstanding?
Not Op, but I think that about sums it up perfectly.
Anonymous wrote:You've got to help her understand that it was a timing issue and nothing more, particularly since she was invited to the beach house as well. I feel for your daughter but agree with the above poster who said the harsh (but true) words "Its not all about you" Horrible lesson, but life. Poor kid.
Anonymous wrote:Am I understanding this right?
* Your family wanted to celebrate the achievement (?) of your daughter getting to the end of high school, so they decide to have a gathering at your house with the whole family
* You call it an "open house"
* Her friends were invited to stop by sometime during the open house
* This open house is for your daughter, it's about her, it's not a "graduation party" for the whole class or even a group of her friends
* Her friends' families may or may not decide to have an "open house" for their extended families for their own children, that their kids' friends are also invited to stop by
* the kids usually move between these open houses on the same day
* nobody wanted to go to your daughter's open house because they are off celebrating their own graduations in way that they think is fun, and they think that a summer beach vacation is more fun than a tea party making small talk with your extended family to celebrate your daughter's achievement when they actually all just "achieved" (?) the exact same thing.
What am I missing or misunderstanding?