I do understand, as I am sure that many other Childless single and couples do, that "kids will be kids." I have the inexplicable joy to have seven nieces and a nephew, all currently under the age of eleven.
What I have a hard time understanding is why, as the childless person, I am always asked and expected to be the tolerant one. I am speaking for myself and not putting words at the fingers of any other of the frequent posters to this thread. I hear "you should be more patient, " "you have low tolerance," "you don't understand how _______ (fill in the blank with hard, difficult, tiring) it is to have children."
I think I have a fairly unique situation, my parents are still happily married, both my sister's are happily married, we all like and get along with each other, and we have all relocated and intentionally ended up within a very close area. When my sister and her husband want to go out to dinner, they call my parents or myself and ask if we can stay with the children, if none of us is available, they don't go out. They do not take their children out to dinner at 8:00 PM just because they feel like they need or want to go out. They do not take their children to the grocery store at 10:30 PM.
One of the previous posters mentioned that they hoped the bad experience was an exception not the norm. Thankfully I still believe that to be true, but it is not as true as it used to be. Sometimes it seems that people have children and expect to go on with their lives without anything changing, i.e. the people who take their already tired child to a $$$ restaurant at 8:00 PM on a Saturday night. If I know by looking at the child that they are exhausted, beyond hungry and about to have a meltdown, why don't their parents know? If they know, why don't they care? How nice can their dinner be if their child is unhappy all the way through dinner? I've heard the response to these situations, maybe they can't get a sitter, aren't people with children allowed to go out... etc.
It just seems that some people have forgotten that when they decided to have a child or two that they would become parents, not just an adult with a child. <- I'm sure that last sentence probably doesn't make any sense, and this post will likely draw all sorts of tsk, tsks.
My sister takes her five children aged (10, 8, 6, 4 and 15 months) to Chick-fil-A every other Tuesday evening for dinner (her husband travels during the week), she said she was a loss of explanation about a month ago when during this outing her eight year old asked her a question for which she had no answer. While they were eating a couple with a little boy came in and sat a couple of tables away. My sister said the gentlemen was in a Business Suit and the woman looked like she worked as well. The little boy sat with his (assumed) parents who were deep in discussion, and proceeded to take his ketchup and dipping sauce and smear it all over the table. The adults made no move to curtail this behavior. The child, then bored and covered in sticky sauce, was allowed to wander around the restaurant touching everything. My sister said that eight year old Caitlin leaned over to her and asked "why doesn't his mommy make him behave better?"
Do we always share the horror stories here? Of course. Why would anyone need to vent over "I was in this restaurant today and there was this child and he was so well behaved."
I am not even sure I made a point. I am just so frustrated with everyone getting scolded and bashed (not just in this thread but others) every time a negative comment is made in regards to a child.
Now back to your regularly scheduled program.