- The person to be surprised is to be surprised in a good way; not in a terrorizing way.
- The person to be surprised does not hate surprises.
- The person's close friends and/or family must be willing enough to coordinate with "you."
- TIMING. It is the most important thing.
Of course all surprises have a lot of variables to take note of. These things should be assured to lean on positive before pushing through: Technically, almost all surprise parties are good if all the variables above are followed. Birthdays, mother's day, Christmas, and all occasions and non-occasions in between. Does the person like you enough? Is it bothersome to visit? What is the best time to do this? Is your presence enough? Bring something nice: food, something "sweet," a valuable gift, a sentimental gift, etc. Let's face it, not all "spontaneous" hangouts are fun and routine hangouts get boring. Do at least 3 things both parties have never done, but always wanted to. Any good thing to see as soon as someone opens their eyes is an amazing feat. Starting a day happy is really a huge point. If food is the surprise, it should be the only surprise. No mess, no nothing. Pretty much everything someone says repeatedly means that much more.
0 Comments
|
Come up with something random for the prompt above.
I do not claim ownership of this project. I am simply a participant.
Latest PostsArchives
July 2014
Categories
All
|