RadioFanatic
Mouseketeer<br><font color=6d6b70>SO not a jewelry
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2005
- Messages
- 4,410
She also said that there is only 15 minutes allotted to celebrate a birthday and she would have to take 2 trains and 2 buses to get there. I can understand not wanting to go, I'm sure she see's her child before and after school, she doesn't need to go to the school to make her child's birthday special. In fact thats not the place to make your child's birthday special, save that for at home and have a party. My dd's birthday was yesterday, I didn't send her to school with anything. I woke her up singing to her, cooked her favorite breakfast, let her open a new outfit and sent her off to the busstop. We took her out to dinner last night to celebrate and we are having a family party for her this weekend and she is doing something with her friends next weekend. She knows how special she and her birthday are to us, and she doesn't need us showing up at school to prove it (and ours is right around the corner).
I appreciate your opinion, but I still stand by what I said with reference to OP's post. At her school, it's customary for parents to go. As a child, they know whose parents come and whose don't. I NEVER want my kid to think I'm one who wouldn't come, 15 minutes or not. Just my two cents.
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