If your parents are leaving and you want to throw a party, you will have to be smart enough not to get caught. Here are some things to keep in mind.
Steps
Step 1. Find out when your parents will be away and for how long, but don't act suspicious when you find this information because they will understand
Step 2. Gather friends to help you remove valuables that could break or be stolen during the event
Hide them in a safe place and remember their original place. Many people notice if something they see every day is even slightly out of place. A good idea is to take photos so that you have something to look at when you tidy up the room.
Step 3. Try to remember the place of everything so your parents will not know that you have moved objects
Taking pictures with your phone will help you remember how to make the beds with decorative pillows and the look of the house before the party. But remember to delete the photos at the end!
Step 4. To avoid police intervention during the party, turn off the outside lights, close all curtains and shutters and ask the guests to park far away, for example in nearby parking lots or adjacent streets
Step 5. Do not make too much noise and do not turn up the volume of the music too much so as not to wake up the whole neighborhood
Step 6. To reduce the presence of cars, bring more friends by the same vehicle
It's also good for the environment!
Step 7. Use a separate bag to dispose of the alcohol residue and throw it in a bin away from home
Step 8. If you use the Internet to communicate the party schedule, erase the tracks if your parents are using your computer
Step 9. Limit the damage
Broken items must be replaced before your parents return!
Step 10. Be responsible
The worst that can happen is having a drunk friend driving. Not only could he go to prison and harm others, but your party will be discovered and, with great probability, your parents will have to answer for what happened.
Step 11. Close all doors (if you have the keys) to rooms you don't want anyone to enter
Step 12. After the party, clean everything and put valuables back before your parents go home
Step 13. Relax until your parents return
Advice
- Never have a party the day before your parents return. If it doesn't work in movies, it sure won't work for you either.
- It limits the use of only one bathroom so as not to dirty the other services in the house.
- Make sure you have plenty of time for cleaning. If your parents will be back at six in the morning the following day, then maybe it's not a good time to throw a party. Even if you think your friends will respect your property, if they drink they will lose control. Make sure you have at least three hours to get the house back to its original state.
- Make sure your parents aren't coming home earlier than expected. Call them on their cell phones to get the information and make them think I'm calling just to find out how they are.
- Don't clean TOO MUCH. Use your common sense, then present the house as if you actually lived in it in their absence, and if you are the messy type, leave the house as you usually would.
- Don't invite a ridiculous amount of people via MySpace or Facebook. It is advisable not to use social networks at all to prevent your friends from inviting others and to find people in the house who will make a mess.
- If possible, throw the party when your parents are out of town two nights in a row, or when they come home late the next day.
- If your parents call to tell you about an early return, send everyone out and ask a couple of friends to stay to help you clean up.
- Ask the guests to bring alcohol so as not to halve your parents' supplies. You will also reduce costs.
- If people drink alcohol at the party, offer guests who have drunk too much to spend the night with you to avoid accidents and get noticed by the neighbors.
Warnings
- Lies sometimes make it worse. If your parents ask too many questions, and you think they have intuition, tell the truth (unless you're a born actor!).
- Some parents ask relatives, friends or, worse, neighbors, to check the house during their absence. It is safer to let guests in from the secondary entrance if possible.