ArwenMarie
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2013
- Messages
- 9,555
During the parades, fireworks, etc. I imagine there are plenty of children on their parent's shoulders. If you have one in front of you do you say something? Or just try to move to a better location? Just wondering.
I think it is a me me me world, but I don't think the blame lies only on the parents. When I was a kid, there is no way a kid would be blocked from seeing a parade/fireworks because all of the spots were taken two hours in advance by adults who wanted to see the parade and refused to give up the spot they waited for to appease a child. My memories of parades in childhood were always of adults standing back and allowing the kids to have the prime viewing locations. We are not kids on shoulders people, but if it came down to standing behind three rows of adults, and either putting my kid on my shoulders or accepting another parade/fireworks show of him not seeing (we had a lot of those on our last trip because one of my three just cannot sit for two hours without annoying everyone around him), then I'm putting him on my shoulders. I really see it as being no different than the people who are sitting on the pavement, and then stand up when the show starts. Are we being selfish? Yeah, we pretty much both are, but the person lining up at two hours pre-show is not exactly doing it for the convenience of others, either.
I tend to agree with this. Maybe I am old school but I think parades like this are primarily for the children. I know some will disagree and throw out that "children of all ages" stuff but I personally think adults standing in the first row, especially those without any kids, should be ashamed of themselves and back off so that more little kids can move up. I would even make my teenage kids move back for smaller children. If there was just a little more common sense and courtesy, this thread would not need to exist.
I'll be sure and slink away to the back row in my wheelchair since I don't have kids and thus apparently my husband( who would be standing) and I are not entitled to watch the parade from the front row.
it is attitudes like this: 'it's all about the kids and adults don't matter' that is the main reason that for the last 5 trips we never even TRIED to see the parades despite my really wanting to revisit MY CHILDHOOD and reminisce .
the world DOES NOT revolve around kids, not even at Disney. maybe if both parents and kids remembered this there'd be less selfishness all around.
One major problem with that is that kids now don't seem to mind as well as we did, so they misbehave and their parents misbehave. I'm relatively tall for a female, but my mom isn't. It really does annoy me when parents suddenly whisk their kids up on their shoulders right when the event starts. If the kids are up there for ten minutes or so before hand, it sends the signal that they will be up there when it starts, so that's fine.
I've also seen where the kids are nowhere to be seen right up until the event starts, and then come running up, and then right up on the shoulders they go. It's just like driving; if everyone is paying attention and thinking about others too, it would all go smoothly... but we know what the chances of that are. Parents need to wake up to the fact that how they act is teaching their own children how to act.
I completely disagree that kids don't mind as well. I actually think the increase in people who choose to never have children has resulted in increased expectations for children, and less consideration for kids. I also think the media making information about violent events available has led to a special fear of what children could grow into, which has contributed to increased expectations for children. When we were kids, there was a whole range of behavior that was just part of childhood. We could play outside freely. We solved our own disputes. We could pretend to make our fingers into guns and shoot each other. Calling names did not make us a bully, it made us a child who still had to be taught and guided into kind and respectful behavior. We had until second grade to learn to read fluently. Today's kids--they have to be reading fluently by kindergarten or first grade, they are pressured to do well on standardized tests by first grade. They are allowed to play only on scheduled playdates and everything has to be used the way it was intended--forget climbing up a slide or making up your own game with the baseball field. They get kicked out of school for putting their fingers in the shape of a gun. They have to do active shooter drills in kindergarten, but they cannot possibly talk about active shooters or pretend to be an active shooter, or they may end up with medication, counseling, and social isolation. Nobody better play cops and robbers, because if anyone chooses to be on the robbers side, they will get the side-eye from every other parent on the block. And forget cowboys and Indians--besides the evil of the shooting, the discrimination and ethnic insensitivity of that game could surely get you off the party invitation list. They are expected to act like mini-adults, and if they don't, the adults around them go on and on about how poorly behaved they are. They are labeled as "bad" if they use the word "stupid" and are expected to be nice to everyone, even though the adults around them are not doing so.
I think people who see kids as being less respectful these days are probably seeing kids who are more frustrated these days at not being allowed to be kids, and failing to see the real problem.
The parades and fireworks are for the kids and if he is blocking another child's view (or wheelchair bound) he would move over or I will be happy to let the child stand in front of me and I'll move to the back or side whatever need be. But if a grownup whines that they can't see I'd probably laugh. We all paid to be here. There is no assigned seating. If you can't see move. It's about the kids and the fact that they can't help being small and not seeing. That's just my opinion. I'm not going to have a child not be able to see to not offend a grown adult.
Without kids and parents, there would be no Disney and certainly no Disneyworld.
The things you list aren't mutually exclusive, they are actually correlated; you and I having more freedom and responsibility growing up would tend to help moderate behavior. Now parents emphasize the wrong things and the kids aren't allowed to be kids... but being kids does not mean you get to hit people, step on their feet, not be respectful to the elderly, etc... which is all things that have become more and more "acceptable" to parents in public. Sociologically speaking, children's behavior tends to change in patterns over time, just like fashion, morality and the like.
I have to respectfully disagree about kids' actual behaviors as I've studied it in grad school (psychology/sociology), and lived it for over 10 years teaching "kids" fresh out of high school. But as you hint at, the problem is indeed the parents, not the little kids.
When I was a child at Disney, others' comfort was just as important as my own, or actually more so to my parents, thank goodness.
When adults trying to "reminisce about their childhood" step on/run the tires of their ECV over the fingers of my children who have been sitting patiently for over an hour for a parade/show/fireworks, my kids absolutely go up on shoulders. And I don't feel bad about it. Not one bit. If the offense was particularly egregious, (like the time my son had his fingers stepped on and head kicked as an adult walked over him trying to get a better view) I'll even make a loud comment and try to block the offenders view. If there are signs forbidding dancing on the People Mover, I'm sure there would be signs prohibiting "shoulder viewing" too, if that is what was desired.
I do make sure to try and get other children in front of me once my kids are up.