Please tell me, I'm not the only parent who is slightly over protective of my 3 daughters and getting lost or heaven forbid kidnapped.
I love them and don't want anything to happen to them.
I have thought about getting my niece and daughter pocketfinder that they have to wear so I can locate them when I need to.
Just wondering what others have done?
Please tell me you are not serious!! yes, kids get away and lost sometimes, but lojack'ing your kids??!!!
I love my kids, too, but I would never do that. Are you planning on letting them go off by themselves? (don't know how old they are, but even my 13 year old pretty much stayed with us all day).
A better idea would be to start teaching your kids the responsibility of making sure THEY know where you are in relation to them at all times. Any kid over the age of about 5-6 years old can learn this....we have always told our kids the following:
1. I will always be watching for them, but they also have to watch for ME. They have always been allowed freedoms like moving about in a room at a museum or other semi-closed in public location - the rule is that they can be anywhere in the room/area that they want, but they must come to me and we all move to a new room together. Nobody leaves on their own.
2. They never have had to hold my hand (well, maybe when we were in a parking lot or crossing the street, but really most of the time not even then because I always had too many kids and not enough hands when I was doing an in-home daycare). They were allowed to walk ahead of me, but they were responsible for making sure they could A. hear me call them back, and B. not walk to far ahead, and C. stop at ALL points where there might be a turn/intersection.
3. If they do not see me, they are to go back to the last place they remember seeing me, because that is often times the first place I will look. There have been so many times that *I* could still see them, but they could not see me, and I could see on their faces that they were looking around for me. Every single time, they went back to the last place they saw me, and it WORKED!! This gave them the confidence to be able to roam freely but know that I am still nearby.
I understand keeping kids safe, I really do. However, I also understand that it is my job as a parent to teach my kids how to someday be functional, normal, responsible adults that can handle adversity, challenge, and problem-solving. Hovering over them in the name of protection is not a very effective way to get them there. It's a journey, and I am responsible as their teacher to get them there in one piece, but it is NOT my job to think for them, keep then wrapped in bubble-wrap, or not let them learn through experience because of my insecurities about the world we live in. These kids have to learn how to live in the very same world most parents fear...what better way than under their loving parents guidance and direction?
