Maybe I'm just overthinking this, help me out. I'm starting to put together my guest list for my baby shower that my mom will be hosting for me. I've decided I want to have a couple shower as I want H to be involved and most of our friends are couple friends. My mom was a little confused by this because she's used to female only showers of her generation. If I'm having a couple shower do I invite all guests with their S/O or is it okay to invite in circles. i.e. all our couple friends but just my aunts and female co-works as singles. Or is that rude? I'm guessing a lot of the older generation guys won't come anyway so should I just invite everyone as a couple and leave it up to them?
Re: Couple baby shower ettiquette
Last year me and H went to a couple's baby shower and it was the most fun I've ever has at one, no cheesy games, just good food and fun times catching up with people - I really want something similar.
lnixon8 Thanks that's what I was thinking but I was second guessing myself
I would invite all as couples like any party, and don't call it a shower, that implies that it is a woman only thing, make sure that it is something men would want to come to..
EDT: Stumbled upon this, I agree with the fact that it becomes more fun when couples are involved, I am awkward in girl only parties. http://www.babycenter.com/0_coed-baby-showers_8243.bc
<a href="http://www.thenest.com/?utm_source=ticker&utm_medium=HTML&utm_campaign=tickers" title="Home Buying"><img src="http://global.thenest.com/tickers/tt1cd146.aspx" alt="Anniversary" border="0" /></a>
Personally, I hope the co-ed thing catches on. While I am the one carrying the child me and my Husband are both becoming parents. He is very involved in the process and excited to become a dad.
Personally, I hope the co-ed thing catches on. While I am the one carrying the child me and my Husband are both becoming parents. He is very involved in the process and excited to become a dad.
****eta box***
I don't think a shower has to be coed for the father to attend or even the grandfathers.
I'm guessing it probably didn't go over well bc a lot of the guys didn't want to attend. Showers aren't my favorite activity either. Coed ones are more awkward to me, and most of my friends are male.
I think most men will not run away screaming from the word "shower," and I think we do men a disservice by thinking that they will. I have nothing against gendered showers, but I think it's silly to think we have to trick men into wanting to celebrate a new baby (or anything else family centered). Many of them are happy to celebrate without the bait & switch.
Hi I see a couple of people asked why it didn't go over well. Well the best I can say is it's really not common in my circles. Like I said you see it more for Bridal showers but not for baby.
The invites were very clear as far as we were having a BBQ, enjoy some beer and come to the couples baby shower. You could tell the guys there were very uncomfortable. We didn't do any of the traditional game type things or stuff like that. Just one and it was about 5mins. To be fair the couples didn't really know each other either so it's not like it was a all friend get together. Plus there was a comment made from a male in the family who was invited about being invited to a baby shower....
Forgot this part also not many of the men who were invited came.
So eh yea didn't go over that well. But the people I had it for were happy and that's all the matters.
SaveSave
The first was a huggies and chuggies and my husband was good friends with the dad-to-be. It was basically a terrific house party with a diaper cake and baby themed cookies. I didn't even know the mom-to-be but it was pretty cool. Lots of beer drinking.
The second was a little more low-key. Backyard BBQ, plenty of food and we just chatted until presents were opened, laughed at a couple cases of double gifting and had cake. There were a couple older guests at this one and they all split directly after gifts.
<a href="http://www.thenest.com/?utm_source=ticker&utm_medium=HTML&utm_campaign=tickers" title="Home Buying"><img src="http://global.thenest.com/tickers/tt1cd146.aspx" alt="Anniversary" border="0" /></a>
I assume it's a "know your circles" type thing, but I don't know any men who need a party to be completely changed to encompass super-masculine themes in order to come. They're generally comfortable even if it isn't all about beer, BBQ, sports, or whatever else you're adding in to get their attention. The catering to hyper-masculinity actually goes against the point of a co-ed/nongendered shower, IMHO.
If H and I had a baby shower I think it would be a party like this, H is still salty that the "wedding shower" thrown for me and he was "left out". I know some guys that would have fun at these parties, I am a woman that hates these things but goes and feels awkward, I would rather a laid back party that both people involved married or baby are celebrating.
<a href="http://www.thenest.com/?utm_source=ticker&utm_medium=HTML&utm_campaign=tickers" title="Home Buying"><img src="http://global.thenest.com/tickers/tt1cd146.aspx" alt="Anniversary" border="0" /></a>
Why must it be a "couples" shower? Why can't it just be a shower, where you invite your friends, some of whom are men and some of whom are women, and some of whom just happen to be pair-bonded with each other? Then you don't have to worry about whether or not to invite all couples - you just simply invite people you want there and are close to, regardless of the makeup of their genitalia.
Also, women can like beer and hanging out. Men can like cupcakes and being supportive of their friends. Both are able to co-exist at an event. And both men and women are capable of attending events that don't cater to the sexist stereotypes of their genders and manage to live through the couple of hours and tell the tale at the end. How is this even a discussion?
Plan shit you would enjoy. Invite people you like. Celebrate. Not that hard.
I guess I just got confused because a "typical" baby shower it's okay to invite just women without their husbands and I know that's how all my aunts expect a shower to go. I will invite my uncles too but don't foresee many coming. I've mentioned to a couple close friends that we want to do a co-ed shower and they are all game. At my bridal shower I invited all females except for one guy friend who was a brides-man.
My mom is the only one who has offered to throw a shower so I don't really have the option of doing a friends shower and a family shower separately. I will invite both single men and women and both parts of any couple.
Ideally I wanted to have a backyard BBQ shower but I live in a cold state and I am due in April so I will have to have an indoor shower. My mom was thinking of having a hot chocolate bar and doing "Baby It's Cold Outside" invites in black and white.
If anyone watches Gilmore Girls. Lane and Zach's shower is my ideal shower. Laid-back, people we love of both sexes there, music playing, people talking, having fun.
I'm not saying you shouldn't have one or that his friends aren't genuinely excited about your baby, but if my good friend asks me if I want to go to a shower or their kid's birthday party, I act all excited and tell them yes! bc I'd rather sit through it, than hurt their feelings. Sometimes people fib about how excited they are to be held captive for 3 hours at a shower, sorry.