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anyone else had to cancel a party? feeling so sad about this

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    elmer5678
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Can’t believe I’m writing this, but I need some advice—and this group always comes through. My youngest child, my daughter, is turning 8 this month, and my husband and I made the really hard decision not to throw her a birthday party this year.

    Over the last few months, her behavior has become incredibly difficult. I’m not talking about typical “off day” stuff. I mean frequent, intense outbursts—hitting, kicking, screaming, cursing, slamming doors, refusing to follow any directions, and saying deeply hurtful things to everyone in the family. It’s not isolated to one type of trigger or situation either—it’s been happening multiple times a week, sometimes multiple times a day.

    We’ve tried everything—calm-down spaces, social-emotional tools, connecting before correcting, taking time to reflect together when things are calmer. But she flat-out refuses to use the tools and often escalates further when we try to help. It’s reached the point where my older child and I have both ended up in tears after the way she’s treated us when she’s upset.

    One particularly heartbreaking example: on her older sibling’s birthday last month, she refused to join us for our celebratory family dinner. Not only that, she was so nasty to her sister that she ended up sobbing. My husband and I ended up taking our older daughter out to dinner without her. It was awful for everyone.

    We told her several weeks ago that if she didn’t start being more respectful and cooperative, she wouldn’t have a party this year. We even gave her a few opportunities to earn it back with better behavior—but nothing really changed. And now here we are, just days away from her birthday, and I feel completely torn.

    On one hand, this is the standard in our family: birthdays are a big deal. The kids get to skip school and do something fun with just us parents, pick out a special cake and theme, and have a party with friends. Her sister had a great party recently. So yeah—I feel sad and guilty that our youngest isn’t going to get that this year. She’s only 7, after all.

    On the other hand, if we go back on the boundary we set—after clearly stating it and giving her chances to change—I’m afraid we’re just reinforcing that there are no consequences for truly harmful behavior. And she knows the expectations. She just isn’t interested in meeting them.

    We do believe in gentle parenting, and I absolutely believe she’s a child who is having a hard time, not a “bad kid.” (Thanks Dr. Becky + Janet Lansbury.) But the truth is—our whole family is struggling right now. The emotional toll of her behavior has made daily life really heavy.

    Tonight was just another example. We asked her to get pajamas on, and she shouted “I’m not doing anything you say!” and stormed off. We calmly told her it wasn’t a choice—it’s bedtime—but she just sat in her room reading, ignoring us. This kind of standoff happens every night and bedtime stretches until 10pm.

    We’ve reached out to a few child therapists in hopes of getting her support, but there’s a wait to get in. Meanwhile, her birthday is coming up fast, and I keep second-guessing this decision not to celebrate.

    Am I going to scar her by skipping her party this year? Will she just spiral more out of control if she feels rejected or left out? Or are we doing the right thing by holding the boundary and following through on a consequence we clearly stated?

    Feeling really stuck and really sad about this.

    – A Very Tired Mama

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      OneMinute
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      Oh man, what a hard situation to be in. I’m so sorry you are going through this. It sounds like there is something else going on with her that is leading to her disregulated behavior. Anxiety can present like this for some kids and ADHD can as well. How is her sleep? Have you talked it over with your pediatrician? I think that could be a great place to start. It sounds like it is a problem that is pretty pervasive and taking away a birthday may backfire and not deliver the intended message. If she is feeling sad or anxious or she is dealing with anger and shame that may only perpetuate the behavior. Are there any other logical consequences you could try or alternatively focus on the days where she is not losing it and do some positive reinforcement? That can go a long way and you may already be doing that. Play therapists are really great at helping kids understand what big feelings feel like in their bodies and how they can cope before exploding and becoming completely disregulated. Thinking of you and hoping for some peace for her and your family ❤️‍🩹

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        Purple Animal
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        totallyyyyyy understand when a child's behavior affects the entire family. Our therapist says to use consequences that make sense to the crime.
        ie: talking back when getting off screens=no more screens, screaming about pajamas= going to bed 20min earlier the next day, bed time stand off= nothing fun in her room.

        This is clearly over simplifying it and you may have already used these strategies. It's so hard. Hang in there. I understand needing to do whatever you need to do to get through.

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