Post by seamonster on Mar 30, 2017 22:07:35 GMT -5
Apparently birthday parties with the whole class are all the rage in DS's daycare class. We got an invitation to one on Monday and a second one today. They're for the same day and only 30 minutes between the start times. I'm annoyed that the second set of parents didn't adjust their start time, but I realize they might not have been able to do so.
I'll RSVP no to the second one because we already said yes to the first one. Hopefully some of the kids are going to each one so neither kid has a party where none of the invited kids show up.
Post by seamonster on Mar 31, 2017 12:29:39 GMT -5
There's only 10 kids in the class, but these are the first parties. All the other kids, and we, brought in a goodie bag for the kids.
H is making me batty about this. He wants me to ask the teachers what to do like they'll get one kid to change to change their party time. I'm pretty sure they'd tell me to pick one and say no to the other.
Lol yeah I can't imagine the teachers are going to care.
But really when you know another kid is having a party on the same day and you're second to hand out an invite you gotta know what's going to happen.
LO has been invited to 1 party before and she and another kid were the only two invited from the class. We invited that Birthday boy to her party. Awkward to pick favs but you see who your kid plays with or the teachers will mention it.
When you rsvp say that you have plans later in the day or something. We've been through a big round of birthdays lately and there was always someone who stayed for a short time bc they had another party to go to and weren't shy about announcing it. (Kinda rude imo)
Post by seamonster on Mar 31, 2017 16:43:11 GMT -5
I think the favorite picking thinking is what H is concerned about as one of the teachers specifically asked him if we got the 1st kid's invitation (after I'd already RSVPed). Who knew the perils of toddler social lives?
Then Comes Family, LLC is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising
program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com.