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I have an ancient
black and white photo of myself at the party celebrating my third
birthday. I am seated at a dining room table surrounded by adults
and children. I am crying in front of the burning candles. Everyone
else has a smile on her face.
Is it any wonder that I suffer through
my kids' parties?
The two words "birthday party"
fill me with dread . I know there are lots of parents out there-mostly
mothers-who thrill to bake special cakes, decorate the house,
and invite the whole nursery school class over.
These are the same parents who sew
their kids costumes on Halloween, knit their own stockings each
Christmas, know how to refinish a dresser, and cut zucchini in
zig zag patterns.
These mothers go all out on birthdays.
They bake cakes in the shapes of cars, Big Bird, and butterflies.
One friend with a war mongerer young son even banked a tank. She
perched a small rectangular cake (the turret) on a larger rectangle
(the main part of the vehicle.) She placed six Oreo cookies as
wheels, licorice as the cannon on the top of the tank, flat sour
sticks for the treads below the wheels, and an open Oreo for the
hatch where you descend into the tank. All that was missing were
toy soliders shooting machine guns.
Women like this should be running
the Defense Department. Instead they make me look bad.
With four young children, I have
tried to pay proper attention to their birthdays. I feel that
it's due them. That if I don't make them a proper party, I
will appear on the list of America's most unwanted mothers.
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| Women like this should be
running the Defense Department. Instead they make me look
bad. |
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I will state this unequivocally.
Every party I have thrown has been a complete and utter disaster.
The first fiasco I planned was a
karate party for my four-year-old's birthday.
He was a fan of teenage mutant ninja
turtles.
I invited his whole class.
I made everybody black head bands
and sash belts. I tied a headband and belt on each child as he
entered the house.
I assembled the boys in the backyard.
I taught them how to stand in karate position and how to punch
and shout, "Utz.." They punched the air. They punched
each other. And then they scattered in the back yard, 18 little
boys.
Um, I said.
I thought the karate would take a
half-hour, not four and a half minutes. The boys swarmed through
the house and through the yard, looking for real action.
Children at a birthday party are
not at their best behavior. "Let's have the cake," I
said.
Candles, singing, slicing , eating.
Cake on the floors, on the walls, on the couch.
We still had one hour left.
I had run out of activities. Suffice
it to say that the forces of compete and utter chaos won out that
day.
I'm still recovering.
Then there was the cheerleading party
I threw for my five year old daughter. Don't accuse me of sexism.
I admit to it. But it was her choice. I offered karate, masochist
that I am. But no, she wanted cheerleading.
Thinking myself brilliant, I made
preparations for everybody to make their own pom-poms. From crepe
paper and two sticks.
Each child glued his pieces. That
took about ten minutes.
My daughter cried because the other
girls finished their pom poms first. Then she fought with her
older brother who started tearing pieces from her pom pom.
Next I took the girls to the family
room and tried to teach them cheers. (Okay, I admit it. I was
a cheerleader until it became too politically incorrect.) Until
my daughter totally freaked out unless she was at the front of
each line. Unfortunately there were two lines.
She started crying. I picked her
up and held her while the other girls practiced their cheers.
Then she ran into her room and missed
the rest of the party.
There have been other disastrous
parties. One where my mother- in- law traveled 1000 miles to be
with her grandchild on his birthday. That was the one where the
birthday boy scratched his best friend's eye because he had taken
his marker.
The whole family, including my mother-in-law,
took four hour naps after that party.
Please, if you are the type of mother
that I am, learn from my mistakes. In the interest of promoting
family sanity, I offer my humble list of suggestions for surviving
birthday parties:
- Never ever have children born
in the winter. Indoor parties are to be avoided at all costs.
- Do not let any siblings within
a 500 mile radius of the house. They are major party saboteurs.
They have been known to blow out the birthday boy's candles.
- Don't expect any activity to go
as planned. My friend made 360 water balloons for her child's
fifth birthday, invited six kids, and expected the kids to play
with the balloons for an hour. The balloons were all popped
ten minutes later.
- Do as my friend Tamar does. Birthday
parties make her so anxious that she tries to postpone them
until the next year.
- Buy your kid ten small presents.
She'll never miss the party.
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