40 answers

First Sleep over Invite Comes with Complications

My 7 year old, who wears a "goodnight" every night due to bed wetting, received her first invite to a sleepover/birthday party. I knew this day would come. And while I want to her go and make a great memory of her friends and spending the night with someone for the first time, I'm worried. Going without her protective goodnight and hoping for the best isn't an option. They are soaked 99% of time in the morning. The party is for a girl in her classroom. The odds are some of the girls will see my daughters stuff and see her dressing for bed. I can't bear th thought of the girls making fun if her. Not to mention saying something to her at school the next week. Some of the 2nd graders are very mature including the birthday girl. My daughter is by far the youngest, technically, and mentally. I don't want my sweet little girl to feel bad or chance a slew of jokes. What would you do? Thanks in advance.

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you greatly for the responses. After reading them, I made the decision that it would be best to have Julia go to the party and leave to come home to sleep. I emailed the mom to RSVP and told her that we would pick her up at 9pm. I already have a response back, and strangely enough she said there are 3 other girls leaving before bedtime! All is well and I am happy with our decision! Thanks again!

Featured Answers

Call the mom! When my daughters started having sleep overs there was always a couple of kids with night time issues. No one pays attention to anything but the kid at the drop off so mom and I took what was needed to the master bathroom. When everyone was changing I just said hey, you can use my bathroom since someone is in the hall bath. No one ever knew.

It works best when you work with the host because you pack her change in a separate bag that host mom puts in the bathroom. I don't even think my daughters knew about it I know I never told them.

14 moms found this helpful

I would tell her she can go to the party and stay til midnight (or whatever time the mom has set for bedtime) that you have something (make something up here) to do early the next morning. And let her go to the party. most of the sleepovers are out the next morning early anyway so she will get all the fun but not the stress. let her take her sleeping bag to lay out if she wants it but then make her come home at night.

4 moms found this helpful

My daughter is in 2nd grade and has the same issue. Only her sleepover was a Girl Scout event that I wasn't able to attend. I sent her but only after I spoke to the troop leader in private and told her the situation. She changed clothes in private and nobody even suspected a thing.

4 moms found this helpful

More Answers

Call the mom! When my daughters started having sleep overs there was always a couple of kids with night time issues. No one pays attention to anything but the kid at the drop off so mom and I took what was needed to the master bathroom. When everyone was changing I just said hey, you can use my bathroom since someone is in the hall bath. No one ever knew.

It works best when you work with the host because you pack her change in a separate bag that host mom puts in the bathroom. I don't even think my daughters knew about it I know I never told them.

14 moms found this helpful

We hosted a slumber party last year. I didn't know it at the time, but one of the kids wore "goodnights". He was the oldest kid at the party. His mother simply called me up and told me that she wanted to let her son come, but this was a concern for her. She wanted to know if I had any suggestions. We decided that when she came over I would hide the goodnight in the bathroom for him. We also decided that long pj pants would disguise things a bit. He didn't need the pull up until bed time. So when it was time to lay down, I reminded him he needed to put it on (I pulled it out for him before he went in the restroom). In the morning, I simply had him go in our bathroom and change. I left a grocery sack in there for the trash. I told him to just leave it in our bathroom. The kid even tied it up for me. So I went in and threw it away. It was no big deal and none of the kids ever had a clue.

10 moms found this helpful

I would let her go to the party and pick her up around 9 or 9:30. Your concerns ARE valid. They will either see what she's wearing or she will wet the bed. Either scenario would not bode well for her socially...and as we all know, girls CAN be brutal.

At 7, it's not uncommon for people to NOT allow their kids do sleepovers. If you tell the other parent that you'll pick her up early, they will not be surprised or offended.

For a very first sleepover, try it with a close, trusted friend who won't judge her and let it be a one-on-one sleepover instead of a "party". Have her work her way up to a slumber party - they can be a bit overwhelming. And 7 is still quite young.

6 moms found this helpful

I would tell her she can go to the party and stay til midnight (or whatever time the mom has set for bedtime) that you have something (make something up here) to do early the next morning. And let her go to the party. most of the sleepovers are out the next morning early anyway so she will get all the fun but not the stress. let her take her sleeping bag to lay out if she wants it but then make her come home at night.

4 moms found this helpful

My daughter is in 2nd grade and has the same issue. Only her sleepover was a Girl Scout event that I wasn't able to attend. I sent her but only after I spoke to the troop leader in private and told her the situation. She changed clothes in private and nobody even suspected a thing.

4 moms found this helpful

Our son was still in GoodNights when his first sleepover rolled around. He also needed to take special medication at night. I just talked to the mom hosting and she handled everything discreetly. He took his travel bag and changed in the bathroom. It all ended up being a non-issue.

If you talk to the host parents, I am sure they can make everything go smoothly for your daughter. I also agree with others who say others are likely to be wearing GoodNights, too. It's not that uncommon at seven.

4 moms found this helpful

You speak to the host mom privately about it, and instruct your daughter to put on her nighttime things in the bathroom privately. Change in the bathroom in the morning privately. That should be all you need to do.

You might be surprised, but she may not be the only one doing this. We had our Pastor's kids stay with us a few days a couple of different times for sleepovers. Their girls wore them. My own kids didn't know (or if they did, they never said anything about it). But the mom mentioned it to me just as an FYI. I didn't give it a 2nd thought.

You might consider sending a gallons ziploc bag with her to put it in when she changes in the morning, if you are concerned about her leaving it in the bathroom trash where others might see it.

3 moms found this helpful

You can't do it, H. Beth. Make up an excuse that she can't yet bear to be out of her own bed, and have her come home before the girls start to "bed down". Tell her that when they ask why she isn't staying, to just say "Oh, I want to go sleep in my own bed!" When they make remarks about it, tell her to laugh it off, hug the birthday girl and walk out the door.

Until her body cooperates and she can have dry nights, she just cannot do an overnight thing with her friends. You can't put her through that. LOTS of kids don't do overnights, H. Beth. If you think that all kids do, then someone's been feeding you a line. There are plenty of kids who think they want to, and then they are crying for their moms.

Do not tell the mom of this birthday girl about her pullups. Just tell her that your daughter isn't ready for a sleepover and you'll pick her up at 9:00. Leave it at that.

D.

3 moms found this helpful

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.