mom2rtk
Invented the term "Characterpalooza"
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2008
- Messages
- 62,531
My child's experience will always be more important to me than yours.
When you put a park full of guests together all thinking that very thing, it creates issues.
My child's experience will always be more important to me than yours.
This is not a man/man problem because men make tiny adjustments at the last second to avoid collisions. The woman here refused to make any adjustments, so was "slammed". I am a man who worked in NYC for many years. It is an art, like a dance, and men who have experience simply do not run into each other. The complaints in the article are hysterical to men like me. They result from a misunderstanding of what is happening. Men who dodge others are not more polite - they simply are not a part of the dance.Fascinating. So what do two men do if neither will move? Are they constantly slamming into each other?
When you put a park full of guests together all thinking that very thing, it creates issues.
Yes we were rude. We acted entitled and superior. We scoffed at those who complained.
We had just arrived at MK, and we were taking the WDW RR to Frontierland. As most of you know, there is no organized queue to get on the RR. The stairs go up on both sides to the same common waiting area. There was a crowd of people on one side, so we went up the other set of stairs. It was clear, and then we merged into the line very near the entrance to the RR.
What we did was not fair to those who went up the other set of stairs and had waited longer than us. We knew this, and did it anyway.
I took a nap and maybe snored a bit at the American Adventure.....![]()
To that guy on Pirates taking flash photos every five seconds, I really wouldn't have crammed your camera down your throat. I would have been more creative than that. My bad.
In Disney commercials you see many things that you don't see in real life. In that picture what you can't tell is if anyone is standing behind the duo, or if maybe they are at the back of a crowd, or have a pole or something behind them. I like to think they are not in the middle of a crowd, blocking the view of many other guests.
Does it count if you're rude to a moron?
I can recall one instance on our last trip... I was trying to get my stroller out of a stroller park, the one between Adventure & Frontier Lands by County Bear Jamoboree. It's pretty tight in there to begin with and some woman & her grown up daughter were standing reading a map or something right in front of my stroller. I said excuse me 3 times, I was physically trying to back my stroller up so she could see what I was doing and she didn't budge (language was not a barrier because she was speaking English to her daughter), so I forced the issue and ended up bumping into her. She shot me a look and made a rude comment, to which I responded with an equally rude comment. She started to spew something again, but her daughter actually backed her down. Probably a good thing, because I was not in the mood. Normally I just let that idiocy roll off my me, but I was hot & tired and just the wrong time to run into an idiot.
All I'm saying is constant promos by Disney showing kids on shoulders during fireworks may desensitize that idea that it is rude. I don't think people at home are going to see these promos and think "I bet they are not in a crowd/blocking the view of others".
Probably not a good idea to dredge this up again but here it goes. Attached is a picture I found on the Disneyland website- a child on dad's shoulders watching the fireworks. The thought crossed my mind that I have seen this in many Disney Parks commercials- a child on the shoulders in a crowd watching fireworks.
Obviously Disney doesn't mind promoting it as it gives a good visual so I would see why many people would find this practice acceptable and not rude. If I wasn't a part of these boards I'm not sure it would click with me. I think subconsciously I would be thinking of the Disney Commercials and think it is fine.
I don't think it is something constantly shown in promos. What I'm saying is I hope people don't believe that everything they see in Disney commercials actually happens, or they are in for a rude awakening. Their kids won't suddenly end up on pirate ships, or fly around with Peter Pan either.![]()
In Disney commercials you see many things that you don't see in real life. In that picture what you can't tell is if anyone is standing behind the duo, or if maybe they are at the back of a crowd, or have a pole or something behind them. I like to think they are not in the middle of a crowd, blocking the view of many other guests.
My child's experience will always be more important to me than yours. That's just a fact of life. However, if there's a way to make everyone happy (such as propping the child on a hip), then I'll opt for that whenever possible. If it's not possible, and especially if I see other children on shoulders... then I'd probably stick the kid up there, too. And feel no guilt.
I want to see a commercial with screaming tantrums, fistfights and mobs of people pressed up against each other for hours waiting in queues. They could call it "The Real Disney Experience".