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Kids Bummed Out They Weren’t Invited To “the Best B-day Party Ever,” Their Moms Get Rowdy

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It’s no secret that kids in school nowadays tend to deal with quite a lot of pressure. But so do their parents, despite their days of schooling being long gone.

This redditor felt peer pressure from other parents for not inviting her son’s entire class to his birthday party. Since money was tight, the OP decided to only invite five of his closest friends, but that left other kids, as well as their moms, quite unhappy, and the latter didn’t keep it to themselves.

Kids’ birthday parties tend to be quite costly

Image credits: Kampus Production (not the actual photo)

This mom couldn’t afford to invite her son’s entire class to his birthday, leaving some people quite unhappy

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Image credits: Mental Health America (MHA) (not the actual photo)

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Image source: randomness57317

While peer pressure can help one stay on track, more times than not it can also have a strong negative influence on them

Image credits: Alena Darmel (not the actual photo)

Few people are unbothered by peer pressure, which tends to accompany nearly every stage of a person’s life. In school, it’s fellow students that might make things needlessly more difficult, at work it’s often the co-workers who do, and if one becomes a parent, other parents might be quick to jump on the pressure bandwagon, as the OP’s example illustrates.

According to health psychologist Shilagh Mirgain, our peers—no matter the age—can be both a positive and a negative influence, depending on whether they are making sure that we’re sticking to our values, for instance, or holding us back instead of encouraging us.

“The metaphor I use is a crab in a bucket. Whenever one of the crabs tries to climb out and escape, the other crabs will grab hold and pull him back down,” Mirgain explained, discussing the latter scenario. “If we don’t know how to deal with the pressure, we can internalize it and self-sabotage by giving up our goals and reverting to old habits.”

Parenting can be stressful enough even without the pressure coming from other adults with children

Image credits: Kindel Media (not the actual photo)

Expecting their kids to be invited to every function is just one of the many examples of parental peer pressure adults might put on others with children. To make matters worse, it often starts within the very first months of someone becoming a mom or a dad, be it because of certain products—or lack thereof—they use with their newborn or how they choose to feed the little one.

Needless to say, the pressure others put on parents, in addition to that they often put on themselves, does more harm than good. Parenting can be—and is, in most cases—stressful enough as it is, and it’s no surprise that stress can take a toll on their mood, parenting behavior (consequently influencing the child’s development) and even their marital satisfaction.

According to Pew Research Center’s data, nearly one-in-three parents find their role stressful most or all of the time. While the majority of them say it’s rewarding and enjoyable, too, that does not mean that the stress, be it the daily hassles or pressure from other parents, affects their well-being any less.

For the OP, the moms in her son’s school seemingly became an additional source of stress, still existing even six months after the party. However, fellow redditors in the comments supported the mother and her effort in making sure her little one had a great time on his birthday.

The OP discussed the situation with fellow netizens in the comments, they didn’t think the mom did anything wrong

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The post Kids Bummed Out They Weren’t Invited To “The Best B-Day Party Ever,” Their Moms Get Rowdy first appeared on Bored Panda.