I have loved this thread. Having spent the past week and a half reading and I am only on page 126, but I have to post!
Never having been to Disney yet, I have to say I am most shocked with the amount of people who are very shocked and distributed by seemingly mild things. Young children who are full or partially naked, mothers nursing, people changing diapers in strollers, arm pit hair, and people throwing up. Any way this mine, not from WDW but an amusement park story.
My shock is this, and I caused it. On a trip to Cedar Point (a north east Ohio park with some of the most wild & best roller coasters in the world) with my 6 year old niece who had just hit 48 inches tall, she wanted to ride ALL the roller coaster she was tall enough to! I put my foot down at Millennium Force (310 feet high first hill and top speed of 92 mph) but told her she could ride the others if she wanted. (This was before Top Thrill Dragster was built, and MF at the time was the tallest, fastest, highest-G coaster in the world.) So we started with the most mild and worked our way up.
Happy little girl, arms up, screaming, having a great time. UNTIL we got on the Magnum at 200+ feet it is quite a coaster. We talked about it as we stood in line, I told her to watch close, and as we were getting on I told her we could walk off the other side, we didn't have to ride. She said she wanted to and smiled. As we started up the first hill she started to look scared. I had to carry her crying softly off the coaster. We sat down and she calmed down.
She said she still wanted to ride more, so we went on one we already did, a wood coaster she loved (Gemini) and all was well. Then she asked what else we need to ride, she had a list. We were down to the "Mean Streak" a good name for this wood, creaking, bumpy wood coaster at 165 feet with a 65 mph top speed. She seemed fine in line, but as we started up the hill she started to cry. The first hill is long and slow, and I'm sure the people behind me thought I was awful as she started to cry harder as we approached the top of the hill, I told her it would be OK.

And then the coaster started. This time I had to carry her crying loudly off the ride, almost hyperventilating! As we got off I noticed that a couple on our same train had ridden Magnum with us. They shot me dagger eyes as they walked pass they made some comment as they walked past, but I didn't hear.
We rode some coasters we had already done, for the rest of the day. Then my DN begged me to let her ride Millennium Force! I said no, of course, but what a child. She is standing next the coaster looking up at the 300+ foot first hill, she tried to convince me she'd be OK! NO WAY!
