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What's the deal with toddler birthday parties?

Categories: Toddlers, Holidays

I have a confession to make: I suck at birthday parties. Especially the birthday parties of small children, and particularly the birthday parties of my own small boy. This has become a matter of increasing urgency. My son is turning three this year, and has not, yet, had a birthday party. That's bad, isn't it?

See the thing is, though I totally dig being Bean's mama, many things associated with motherhood haven't come naturally to me. Like packing snacks for the playground, decorating his bedroom, or planning his birthday parties. I assumed that I'd acquire this knowledge in the same way I'd miraculously acquired the ability to sooth my shrieking baby back to sleep in the middle of the night. But the instinctual ability to pack a diaper bag or shop gracefully with a stroller, a baby, and an armful of bags never did develop..

His first birthday didn't happen in part because my husband and I had just begun renovating our new house and were trying to do something about the fact that we'd just removed a major load bearing wall. It also had do do with the fact that my husband and I couldn't agree on what a first birthday celebration should mean. His basic theory "Why celebrate at all because the kid won't even remember anyway" (His words, not mine.) Mine was more along the lines of, "Woo-hoo we made it through the first year with our kid intact, someone give us a medal immediately."

In the end, his birthday slipped by without so much as a muffin on the day of. We did have a festive dinner with a few good friends a day or so later, and there may have been an couple presents. Markedly absent however were the following: Icing. Icing-on-face-smooshing. Party hats. Other small persons similarly lacking the ability to propel themselves vertically across the room.

I vowed to do better with his second birthday.

But when the time rolled around, I was totally unprepared. What does one plan for a toddler whose birthday falls a few days after Valentines day, in the thick of winter?

I decided on a sledding party, for lack of a better idea. Bean had just barely gotten the concept of sledding and was not very into the whole idea of snow-in-the-face, but still, it seemed like it had potential to be fun. I bought last minute invitations and sent them out to a half dozen friends with small kiddos; bought some cute napkins and paper plates, and thought I was more or less set. Then it snowed. And snowed. First three feet. Then more. Our long narrow drive was slippery with ice and packed on either side with walls of snow and we canceled the entire thing.

Bean didn't seem to mind. The whole concept of BIRTHDAY wasn't really cemented in his head. yet, and he was game for the cake with chocolate-cream cheese icing we made together in the kitchen, and was giddy with delight blowing out his two candles plus one to grow on. We took pictures. He had presents. Still a party didn't happen.

Now we're a half a year away from his third birthday and a part of me is already dreading the idea of it. Midwinter. Three-year-olds. Etc. Another part of me thinks it is ridiculous to be even thinking about his birthday party this far in advance. But I have mama friends who routinely do these kinds of things. They have day-planners marked with in-advance bookings so that their kids can have had pony rides and magic shows and music performances at their parties.

I want to know what the deal is with toddler parties. Particularly three-year-old toddler parties (Are three year olds even called toddlers? Maybe that's a good place to start.) How much is enough (or not enough?) How much is too much?

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