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| #Post#: 78391-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Minimum age for leaving a child unattended at a party | |
| By: DaDancingPsych Date: January 16, 2023, 7:41 am | |
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| The "single parent" issue has had me thinking. Yes, hosting a | |
| party where "a parent is required" might eliminate some kids | |
| who's single parent (or even duo parents) cannot attend. That | |
| stinks, but that happens with all kinds of parties. If you host | |
| a pool party, as a non-swimmer, I may feel uncomfortable | |
| attending. If you host a shower and I just lost my job, I may | |
| not be able to afford a gift and feel like I can't attend. If | |
| you host a child focused party, as a non-parent, I may not | |
| really fit the criteria of a guest. Life happens sometimes. | |
| I think as a host, you need to decide the sort of party that you | |
| are willing and able to host. If you want/need a parent to | |
| attend, then so be it. If you are able to offer sufficient | |
| supervision (either yourself or from recruiting other parents), | |
| then that's fine, too. The key (and it sounds like you've | |
| figured this out) is to be clear what you are offering and what | |
| your expectations are. If a single parent sends regrets citing | |
| their unavailability, then you can decide if you are | |
| willing/able to offer supervision for their child. But I also | |
| don't think that that is necessarily required as much as that | |
| may stink. | |
| #Post#: 78478-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Minimum age for leaving a child unattended at a party | |
| By: mime Date: January 23, 2023, 11:51 pm | |
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| I agree with everyone who said that your invitation should be | |
| clear. I'm grateful for the invitations that have clear | |
| expectations, because the guests are trying to figure it out | |
| too! When asking parents to stay, make sure to have enough food, | |
| beverages, and seating for all of them. It stinks to stand in | |
| the heat for a 2 hour party because the one picnic table in the | |
| shade is for the kids' activity... | |
| My kids were around 6 or 7 when they transitioned to parties | |
| where parents dropped and ran. At that point, most parents from | |
| school had met each other, and kids were used to being together | |
| with one adult/teacher in charge. | |
| One party for 5-year olds was interesting: they had 2 rooms. One | |
| had the party, with some actors dressed as mermaids leading the | |
| activities and serving pizza. The other room was for the | |
| parents, where we watched the football game and ate pizza. The | |
| kids were kind of alone, but mom or dad was just in the next | |
| room. That was a thoughtful host! | |
| #Post#: 78980-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Minimum age for leaving a child unattended at a party | |
| By: jazzgirl205 Date: March 18, 2023, 9:28 pm | |
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| I think my daughter's 4th birthday party was the last party | |
| where all the parents stayed. For her 5th b'day party, none of | |
| the parents stayed. For her 6th party maybe one or 2 stayed. I | |
| had 10 or 15 guests. If a host wanted parents to stay, they | |
| served beer and wine. Even Chucky Cheese served beer. That was | |
| about 20 years ago. I come from a big family and I've taught | |
| theatre and art to children. Lots of children don't bother me. | |
| YMMV. | |
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