You Had a Great Time, Remember?

So for the next couple of days, I will be running around like a headless chicken. We are having Mr. Personality's birthday party on Sunday at my sisters house, even though his actual birthday isn't until next week. Various factors, including the very selfish fact that Hubba-hubba and I are attending a long-awaited concert on the 25th, helped us to move it to this weekend.

I am expecting about 25 people and the theme will be Bob the Builder. Gee, I'm sure no one saw that one coming. I did a bit of research, and so this will be medium on the "elaborate" scale. We will have orange cones and construction signs to designate the play area, which will have a sandbox with various toys ranging from the traditional shovels to dump trucks. I am thinking to put little "surprises" for them to dig for, but I am undecided as of now. There will also be various ride-on vehicles, a mini bowling game thing I picked up, and a bunch of other toys that I am just going to throw out there. Of course there are a million other things, those are just the ones that stick out in my mind at this moment. A pinata, and a Bob the Builder "stick the wrench on the toolbelt" game are also in the wings.

As I was poring over various birthday party menus and planners, I tried to remind myself that for all intents and purposes, Mr. Personality will probably not remember this party. He will be, after all, only three. I am betting that later on in his life I will show him the pictures and he will have little to no recollection of that day.

I don't know about anywhere else, but here in SoCal, parents have been known to have some serious cases of one-upmanship. Especially if they live in a neighborhood with lots of other children. Because if little Johnny down the street had a pony for his birthday, well, what kind of parent would they be if their little Mikey had anything less? Why surely that would show the whole world what horrible parents they were and how little they loved their son. So Mikey gets a petting zoo, and then the next birthday on the block has a pony, a petting zoo, and a train. And it just keeps escalating from there. By the time these kids are ten, the parents are renting out Disneyland for 500 of their closest friends. It is madness I tell you, madness.

I am trying not to get sucked into that mindset, but it is hard. I want everyone to have a good time, kids and adults. At the very least, I can start out on the low end of things and by the time Mr. Personality is ten, I will only be at the petting zoo level.

Comments

karla said…
Wow. I think I had a McDonald's birthday party when I was little once.

What ever happened to pin the tail on the donkey?

That's more elaborate than wedding planning I think ;-)
Heather Plett said…
I'm with Elizabeth - SoCal birthday parties sound SCARY! If that's "medium" elaborate, my kids' parties are downright BORING! They're lucky if they get CAKE!

And is that 25 people as in 25 THREE YEAR OLDS??? 'Cause if it is, someone really should check your sanity level! I'm hoping that at least SOME of those people are responsible, sober adults.

The last few times my kids celebrated their birthdays, I took the easy route, told them they could only invite three friends (to heck with the idea that they had to reciprocate all the invitations they'd received), we rented a room at a hotel with a swimming pool, ate pizza and cake at the pool and had a sleepover. Simple and no mess for me to clean up afterwards. Plus, it means the kids only get three presents, which means less clutter in my house afterwards.
Piece of Work said…
Sounds like a great party! YOu would be putting us to shame here--although everyone puts us to shame, since I hate throwing parties. I'm already trying to think of ways to get out of throwing one for Isaac--in February.
I LOVE HEather's idea for parties, I am definitely doing that when the kids are older. How old are your kids, anyway?
I am sure you will all have a fabulous time and Mr. Personality will have great pictures to look at even if he doesn't remember it.
Suzanne said…
Do you also contract out your services? I've already chosen B the Builder as the theme for Sean's 4th birthday party, in March. So if you have any tips you'd like to share after the fact, I'd love to hear them!
Anvilcloud said…
This guy would pat the kid on the head and take him out for an ice cream cone. But I am only Canadian and only a male on top of that. :)

Is this at your house? Will people be wearing pants? Sorry ... no, I'm not.
Gina said…
Heather- Oh lordy no, I would NEVER invite 25 children to a birthday party. I would never invite 25 children ANYWHERE. Only five of those are children, the rest adults. :)

Elizabeth- Why Elizabeth, I haven't heard from you in such a very long time, so nice that you stopped by...

Amy- Seriously, at their age, they are not going to remember, so don't even worry about it.

Suzanne- I have some handy links if you would like...

AC- This is at my sister's house, which is much larger and nicer than mine, with a lovely backyard. Pants will definitely be required attire, no exceptions.

I will have to take pictures for you guys, so that you can see it is not going to be all that elaborate.
Gina said…
Oh I forgot- Karla, the pin-the-wrench on Bob is exactly the same as pin-the-tail on the donkey. Except it is with stickers.
Heather Plett said…
POW - in answer to your question, my kids are 8 & 9 (and 3, but she hasn't really had non-family parties yet) and they LOVE the hotel thing. I'd definitely recommend it.
Melodee said…
Hey, you can't be inattentive and distracted AND throw big birthday parties. You're going to have to choose a style and STICK WITH IT!

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