Mskanga
<font color=navy>Can speak and read 4 languages fl
- Joined
- Feb 29, 2000
- Messages
- 5,945
One of my DD's classmates in kindergarten suffers from a birth defect that has some parts of her body disfigured such as her face. Yesterday the kids had a spring party and right after that they had bunny race relays. I heard these two other mothers ( their kids were in other kindergarten classes ) talking about this little girl and wondering how kids treated her at school and why she didn't have cosmetic surgery.
I turned around and told them , the kids in the school don't treat her any different that any other child because we are all different, nobody has the same eyes or ears. It killed me because that child's mother is in the school often but nobody knows who she is because she's a very reserved person, I know if she heard that yesterday it would have hurt her feelings.
It just amazes me that grown ups don't realize those things and if that's what they say at school , what do they say at home??
I turned around and told them , the kids in the school don't treat her any different that any other child because we are all different, nobody has the same eyes or ears. It killed me because that child's mother is in the school often but nobody knows who she is because she's a very reserved person, I know if she heard that yesterday it would have hurt her feelings.
It just amazes me that grown ups don't realize those things and if that's what they say at school , what do they say at home??

) 
The man was very nice and explained to the kid that he had been on the Yankee farm team and gotten into a car accident where he lost part of his arm and Mr. Steinbrenner told him then that he'd always have a position in the Yankee organization. Of course, we apologized for the question, and this man was very gracious, saying"It's not a bad thing to have a natural curiousity".