Magpie
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2007
- Messages
- 10,615
A comment in another thread got me to thinking about "talking to strangers".
Do you talk to strangers? Do your kids?
I don't drive, and the main bus to downtown runs past several "sheltered" workshops, a homeless shelter, and assorted other social agencies. As a result, my children and I would end up taking the bus with a lot of unusual people.
With the ones who were shouting, seem agitated or were talking to invisible people, I trained the kids not to make eye contact and stay clear. "Leave him alone with his imaginary friends, honey. Yes, I know he sounds like he's arguing with them, but they're HIS imaginary friends. He'll just have to deal with them himself." Sometimes we moved up to the front of the bus, to sit near the driver.
But with the rest...
Talking to strangers was definitely allowed. A friendly smile goes a long way. But you cannot, under ANY circumstances, tell them your last name, where you live or any other personal information. It was good early training for navigating the internet, actually!
Strangers often offered my children candy. The protocol there was to take the candy, say thank you politely, and slip it into a pocket. If the stranger asks, either say you're saving it for dessert or you're not hungry right now. I told the kids I'd trade them for something better later. Arguing with strangers or trying to refuse their gifts never leads to any good.
Some of the gifts strangers gave my children were hilariously bizarre. Surgical gloves! (I intercepted those and told the kids we'd save them for "later" - and later I told them why they weren't an appropriate gift.) A copy of Cosmopolitan, handed to my 5yo daughter!
An actual eye testing chart with the different sized letters - the kids LOVED that one, and it made the bus ride immensely fun as people were asking my kids to test their eyesight.
Every bus ride was another opportunity to teach my kids a little more about interacting with the world. I taught them about safety, about boundaries, about courtesy and about acceptable topics for public conversation.
I love people! And I miss the days when just stepping onto the bus with my small children got half the passengers smiling at us immediately.
Do you talk to strangers? Do your kids?
I don't drive, and the main bus to downtown runs past several "sheltered" workshops, a homeless shelter, and assorted other social agencies. As a result, my children and I would end up taking the bus with a lot of unusual people.
With the ones who were shouting, seem agitated or were talking to invisible people, I trained the kids not to make eye contact and stay clear. "Leave him alone with his imaginary friends, honey. Yes, I know he sounds like he's arguing with them, but they're HIS imaginary friends. He'll just have to deal with them himself." Sometimes we moved up to the front of the bus, to sit near the driver.
But with the rest...
Talking to strangers was definitely allowed. A friendly smile goes a long way. But you cannot, under ANY circumstances, tell them your last name, where you live or any other personal information. It was good early training for navigating the internet, actually!
Strangers often offered my children candy. The protocol there was to take the candy, say thank you politely, and slip it into a pocket. If the stranger asks, either say you're saving it for dessert or you're not hungry right now. I told the kids I'd trade them for something better later. Arguing with strangers or trying to refuse their gifts never leads to any good.
Some of the gifts strangers gave my children were hilariously bizarre. Surgical gloves! (I intercepted those and told the kids we'd save them for "later" - and later I told them why they weren't an appropriate gift.) A copy of Cosmopolitan, handed to my 5yo daughter!
An actual eye testing chart with the different sized letters - the kids LOVED that one, and it made the bus ride immensely fun as people were asking my kids to test their eyesight.Every bus ride was another opportunity to teach my kids a little more about interacting with the world. I taught them about safety, about boundaries, about courtesy and about acceptable topics for public conversation.
I love people! And I miss the days when just stepping onto the bus with my small children got half the passengers smiling at us immediately.




