Co-Parenting Special Occasions: Birthdays, Communions and School Events

The big moments in a child's year — birthdays, First Communion, Confirmation, school plays, sports day, sixth-class graduation — are the moments when they most want both their parents present. They are also the moments when separated parents most often disappoint each other and, indirectly, their children. The fix is rarely complicated. It's usually about planning earlier and communicating more clearly than feels natural.
Why These Moments Carry So Much Weight
A child standing on stage in the school play scans the audience for both parents. A child blowing out birthday candles looks around to see who is there. A child crossing the line in sports day looks for the people they want to have seen them. These small visual moments are where children most directly experience the shape of their family.
When both parents are there, children stop noticing — that's the point. When one parent is missing because the parents couldn't work out the arrangements, children notice for a long time. Years later, what they remember about a school play sometimes isn't the play.
The Basic Principle
Both parents at the same event, sitting separately if needed, civil but not performative, focused on the child. Not arrival times choreographed to avoid each other. Not one parent leaving early so the other can "have the moment". Both parents present, both clapping, both giving the child a hug afterwards. The child doesn't have to choose, doesn't have to perform for two audiences, and doesn't have to carry the awkwardness of one parent being absent.
This requires both parents to be able to be in the same room without either of them creating an atmosphere. For most separated families this is achievable. For families where it genuinely isn't — high-conflict situations, safeguarding concerns, recent volatile incidents — a different approach is needed, covered below.
Birthdays
The child's birthday itself should be marked in both homes in some form, but the actual celebration usually works best on one side, with the other parent and family connecting around it.
A common pattern: the parent whose week it falls in hosts the main party. The other parent has the child for a meal, a day out, or a smaller celebration around it. Presents come from both. Both parents are mentioned in the child's day. Where the relationship can support it, the other parent attends the main party briefly — for the cake, then leaves. This is often the moment children remember most warmly.
Religious Occasions and Sacraments
First Communion, Confirmation, and other family religious events are particularly loaded — they involve extended family on both sides, photos, often a meal afterwards. The default should be both parents present, both involved in the church ceremony, both at the meal afterwards if at all possible.
For families where attending the same meal isn't workable, an alternative pattern: both parents at the church and the immediate photographs, separate meals afterwards. This is a real compromise, but it's much better for the child than one parent being absent from the church entirely.
School Performances and Sports Day
The default should be both parents attending. Most Irish primary and secondary schools won't have a ticketing arrangement that creates competition between parents — there's room for both. Where there is, ask the school for two seats in different parts of the hall. Almost every school will accommodate this without comment; they see it every week.
Photos and videos: take your own. Don't depend on the other parent to share theirs after the event, and don't promise to share yours. This is one of the most common low-grade sources of post-event tension.
Christmas Day
This deserves its own planning conversation, well in advance. The principle is the same: predictable, written down, alternated or split fairly, both parents involved in some form. Build the pattern into your parenting plan so the discussion doesn't have to happen every November.
High-Conflict Situations
If you genuinely cannot be in the same room as the other parent without serious risk of conflict — verbal or otherwise — the alternative is separate attendance at different points in the event. Different sessions of a school open evening. Sports day where one parent watches their child's morning races and the other the afternoon ones. A birthday party with each parent hosting a smaller version at a different time.
This isn't the ideal — your child wants both of you there at once. But it's better than your child watching their parents avoid eye contact across a school hall, or worse, having an argument visible to other parents.
If high-conflict attendance is becoming a pattern, this is one of the situations a solicitor or mediator can help with — sometimes by helping you negotiate a written protocol for joint attendance at major events.
Communicate the Logistics in Writing
Always. Through your usual channel. Confirm: who is attending, what time, where you're sitting if relevant, who is bringing the child, who is collecting after. Avoid surprises. The element of surprise — turning up to find the other parent has changed the plan without telling you — is what turns these events sour.
The Long View
What children remember from their childhood is mostly small moments — and the people who were there for them. Separated parents who turn up to the things that matter, even when it's awkward, give their children a story they can carry forward with both parents in it. The work to get there is sometimes hard. The reward is everything.
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