scanne
<font color=blue>OK, I must have really small ears
- Joined
- May 13, 2000
- Messages
- 5,365
Last night while we were giving our kids a bath, DH and I began to discuss our trip with our DS4. We were telling him about all the cool things we're going to do, which characters we're going to see, where we're staying (you get the idea!). Now, DS knows we're going, he's been there 5 times already in his short life, but now he is SO much more cognitive and really ready to be immersed in the excitement of the whole trip!
So we move the conversation to listening to mommy and daddy and following directions - which he has NOT been doing very well with here on the home front. It's a daily battle for him to stop doing something the first time we tell him.
We were explaining how important it is for him to listen and stay with mommy, daddy, grandmom and grandpop (who he calls "dude," BTW
).
Then he asks, "What if I can't find you?"
We proceeded to tell him to find a cast member (someone with a nametag) or a security guard (someone in a uniform). He then asked, "Can I tell Mickey Mouse that I'm lost?" I told him yes - thinking that "Mickey" will inform his guide or some other CM around him.
So before bed we review with DS what to do if he gets lost. He says:
"Find a cast member or police man, or a Disney character. Tell them my name and that we're staying at the Wilderness Lodge. And I can have them check my shoe!"
We got the kids "who's shoes ID" things that velcro to their sneakers.
So, do you have this talk with your kids? How do you ID your kids in case they do get separated from you?
So we move the conversation to listening to mommy and daddy and following directions - which he has NOT been doing very well with here on the home front. It's a daily battle for him to stop doing something the first time we tell him.
We were explaining how important it is for him to listen and stay with mommy, daddy, grandmom and grandpop (who he calls "dude," BTW

Then he asks, "What if I can't find you?"
We proceeded to tell him to find a cast member (someone with a nametag) or a security guard (someone in a uniform). He then asked, "Can I tell Mickey Mouse that I'm lost?" I told him yes - thinking that "Mickey" will inform his guide or some other CM around him.
So before bed we review with DS what to do if he gets lost. He says:
"Find a cast member or police man, or a Disney character. Tell them my name and that we're staying at the Wilderness Lodge. And I can have them check my shoe!"
We got the kids "who's shoes ID" things that velcro to their sneakers.
So, do you have this talk with your kids? How do you ID your kids in case they do get separated from you?