In an attempt to stimulate some critical thinking and respectful discussion, I have a link to my friend's blog, where she writes about some incidents she recently witnessed of parents essentially bullying their children (which is a popular form of "parenting").
I encourage you to read and discuss. Many threads on this board turn into this debate anyway, so let's call a spade a spade and try to discuss in a respectful manner.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 2010
Children are people too! Or, why some people should not be allowed to breed
I was sitting in the bleachers (why are they called bleachers?) watching my son's swimming lesson when my attention was captured by a family sitting behind me.
"Skyler*! Quit it! You're not in swimming lessons! You'll do swimming lessons when you're older."
I turned around to see a woman scolding a toddler who had the audacity to be climbing down the bleachers. Hmm, I thought. Well, maybe in some way she's trying to placate him with future fulfillment since he obviously wants to get in the pool but can't right now, though he does not appear old enough to have the cognitive abilities to understand what she's saying, much less comprehend getting to swim a few years from now.
Dear Blogger, did it ever occur to you that this child is clearly climbing all over the bleachers to try to get away from his mother and jump in the pool? My DD would have been trying that. Would you rather, she have let the toddler fall off the bleachers and fracture his skull, or climb down the bleachers and jump into the pool on his own and drown? By the way at DD's swim lessons last week, we watched a set of parents have to jump in the pool in all their clothes to fish their kid out. Not a good situation
It only got worse. Sitting with the mom and toddler was another little boy who appeared to be the same age, a little girl a year or two older, and a man. Then horror of horrors, the first little boy pushed a train he was playing with off the edge of one bleacher and onto the platform below. "Skyler! You drop that again, you're gonna go sit in the van with Dad!" An older boy nearby picked up the train and handed it back. "Say thank you," the mom prompted. "Say thank you!"
Good God, can that child even talk?
On and on: "Don't stand up! Don't drop that! Sit still!"
Do you people realize that you're at a swimming pool and not a monastery? And have you noticed what age your children are? I think your standards of decorum might be a tad extreme.
Dear Blogger. Do you know how many times that child had intentionally dropped/pushed that train and expected his father to pick it up for him that day, or how many times he might have pushed or knocked that train into an unrelated person. If you don't, you can't blame the Dad for being slightly annoyed. For example, after telling our child to quit kicking the seat of the person in front of them 15 times on an airplane or at a move or show, I tend to become annoyed. Also, Do you teach your children to say thank you? If not, how on earth do you expect them to learn when it is appropriate and needs to be said. I love it when a parent is observed teaching their child to have some actual manners.