I don't even feel comfortable in situations at work when I'm leaving the organization and they get my boss to say something nice about me in front of other people. It's a nails on the chalkboard experience ... just let me hand you my keys and go ... I don't need to be recognized ... I'm already leaving!
Yo if that's who you want to be, that is totally ok. It just doesn't follow that other people who do like those sorts of things are being self-absorbed. A good party is as much for the enjoyment of the attendees as it is the object/person in question.
Yes, this is exactly what I was getting at. Your (Vector's, I mean) position is perfectly valid, and even the one I tend to agree with more, but it's too easy to think - and I'm not suggesting that you
do, only that what you said trends that way - that other people who enjoy something different do so out of a moral failing rather than just having different preferences.
Separately, I think the thing here is that, because a few particular "gender"-reveal (which totally should be sex-reveal) parties of obscene Hollywood-style excess have been reported on (usually after causing some kind of disaster or killing somebody), people associate the concept with excess, but there are plenty of people having perfectly reasonable and sedate "gender"-reveal parties with family and friends and no explosions. It does seem, to me, like kind of a trivial thing to celebrate, and it does smack of that weird suburban obsession with gender stereotypes, but I can't begrudge someone an excuse to throw a party. When nenjin says,
Sorry, you're not going to convince me sending a greeting card and having a gender reveal party (some of them have run 5 figures) are even remotely on the same level of community building or intent. I think we've raised an era of people starving for validation and gender reveal parties are just another manifestation of that. It isn't enough to be happily married and fertile. No, it needs to be acknowledged in the grandest fashion possible as well.
, sure, a
five-figure gender reveal party might suggest an unhealthy level of cultural obsession with spectacle, but it's only by virtue of the way things are reported in the media that that is the
central idea of a gender-reveal (oh, I guess I got tired of the scare quotes, just mentally insert them) party for most people. The party itself isn't the problem here, it's the way people are celebrating it. Well, I think that's kind of mean-spirited too, but at least I understand the
principle behind complaining about people spending too much money on a frivolous party, even if it does sound like pearl-clutching (I mean, would you prefer they just hoarded the money instead?); but I don't understand at all wanting to tell people
no, you can't have a party about this at all.