During a recent conversation about children’s birthday
parties, my wife utilized Pinterest to open my eyes to what is trending in
toddler celebrations. Unbeknownst to me, there is an entire subculture
constructed around kid’s birthday parties. Gone are the days of inviting over
the grandparents, taking a few photos, and watching the child decimate a cake.
I now realize that as a member of middle-class America, the expectations have
become much higher. Apparently, hosting a party for a toddler is closer to the
Golden Globes than I realized. There will be a cohesive theme, custom
invitations, and all attendees should receive gift bags upon their exit. From
what I observed, planning a party for the modern child has many components.
We begin at the theme. What motif would properly express the
child’s interests? Agriculture? Dinosaurs? Tort Reform? Once this has been
identified, you are faced with creating the theme-based custom invitations.
Hours must be spent painstakingly integrating the concept in a way that seems
both original and clever. This usually involves rhyming something with the
child’s age so that “You are invited to Timmy’s third birthday party” becomes “Timmy
is just as excited as he can be, because his birthdays, like his nipples, can
now be counted by three!
Now you are faced with the task of refreshments. Gone are the
days were it was acceptable to set out a bag of Doritos and a case of Big K,
now the party hosts are expected to churn out cleverly labeled custom
appetizers. These, like all aspects of the celebration, must adhere to the
theme. So if you were intent on utilizing Doritos and it was a traffic
sign-themed party you could attach them to pretzel sticks and refer to them as
“Yield Signs” or something comparably whimsical.
Toss in the gift bags and custom decorations and before you
know it little Timmy is being forced to go to a state school because most of
his college fund was drained on his Dubai-themed fourth birthday. I did feel
that one component missing from all of the parties I saw was a gift bag fort
the parents of the attendees. It could be filled with Merlot, ibuprofen, and
the promise of a two-hour nap.
Either way, I am glad that my wife is creative so that our
children will not grow up asking if they "have to have their birthday at
the Pizza Hut by the Interstate again this year." After all, the only
thing worse than your offspring posing that question is hearing the response,
"Not if they keep jacking up their buffet prices."
Since it would appear that theme-planning for toddlers is
rather lucrative, I have created the following ideas I plan to share on
Pinterest:
Dark Arts – Pentagrahm crackers could be served and one lucky
child would get to contact a deceased great-grandparent via séance. All
attendees would receive a gift basket containing a sacrificial dagger, Ouija
board, and selected children’s books by Anton LaVey.
OSHA Violation – The children would taking turns grabbing
exposed electrical wiring until they found a live circuit and all caustic
chemicals would be placed in Kool-Aid Squeeze-It bottles and labeled “super-hero
fuel.” Gift basics would include OJI paperwork and a refrigerator magnet with
the number for poison control.
Hunger Games – Only one hotdog and two Capri Sun pouches
would be provided during the course of this mandatory 6-hour celebration.
Attendees would be armed with makeshift weapons and placed equidistant from the
aforementioned refreshments. Gift baskets would contain gauze, antiseptic
rinse, and diminished respect for humanity.
Controlled Substances – Guests would be encouraged to bob for
Adderall in cough syrup and there would be a scavenger hunt for Pseudoephedrine
in neighboring homes. Gift baskets would include barbiturate trail mix and the
business card of a reputable criminal defense attorney.
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