famsen
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2006
- Messages
- 2,074
Please tell me you have not seen this and just made it up
I actually saw (and smelled) people changing a diaper on the benches behind us in The Tiki Room.

Grossest thing EVER!
Please tell me you have not seen this and just made it up
Are there really people on here DEFENDING a boy urinating on a public walkway while the parents stand by and do nothing?!?!![]()
I am the mother of a boy too, and I just can't buy this argument. The kid would have to get his pants down first, and that's where I would step in as a mother IMMEDIATELY, even if I needed to be somewhat forceful, to stop it from progressing. If my child couldn't hold it and ended up with wet pants, so be it. I would not let him drop his pants in public and use a sidewalk as the place to relieve himself.
That's the last thing I'd want to step in...
Assuming that a changing pad was used, I'm not sure that there wood be any 'poop residue'. I know that when we change our daughter's diapers, we aren't getting poop anywhere, at all.
After posting this sight, I too started thinking about possible scenarios. I thought maybe the kid just had a sudden "attack" and it was either "go" or wet his pants... and I'd probably go with option A too. But we just got back from Epcot, and on the way out my older son was recounting the event and I stopped him when he said "kids". I replied "You mean it wasn't just one kid?" and he said "Yes, it was two boys." There goes my theory.I obviously wasn't there, but I'll play devil's advocate. Sometimes kids do something that is mortifying and you just try to get it over with. I prefer to think that the child unexpectedly pulled down his pants and started peeing (I have three boys and they've all done it at one time or another - and it's been mortifying)
....
Personally, I'd rather give the parents the benefit of the doubt than assume the worst about them.
While I wouldnt really like to step in it, dont think that would be the worst thing...![]()
a classic example of continuing evidence that the nature of the guests
at WDW has changed drastically......expect to see more of the same type
of behavior as time goes by...other common examples are t shirt msgs., slutty
clothes, garbage language, entitlement mentality, etc etc etc. I think our
days of returning 4 to 6 times a year are about over![]()
Is it a coincidence that discount stuff (free dining plan, low resort rates, etc.) has been on the rise the last several years?!![]()
I obviously wasn't there, but I'll play devil's advocate. Sometimes kids do something that is mortifying and you just try to get it over with. I prefer to think that the child unexpectedly pulled down his pants and started peeing (I have three boys and they've all done it at one time or another - and it's been mortifying). It's exceedingly difficult to stop a boy from peeing once he has started, and perhaps the looks on the parents' faces were more from their being mortified about people's seeing what was happening rather than their giving people dirty looks for interrupting their planned bathroom break and location.
While I know there are rude people around, I really don't believe that parents would instruct or in any way whatsoever encourage a child to go to the bathroom the way OP described.
Personally, I'd rather give the parents the benefit of the doubt than assume the worst about them.
As the grandmother of a three-year-old boy (who thankfully has never done this but OMG the potential!!!) I have to applaud your open mind and willingness to look at the "other side" of the situation!
Courtesy and good manners have nothing to do with how much money you have or how much money you spend - they are both free. It all comes down to how you are raised. If you are raised to be courteous and to have good manners, you are not going to do things like change a diaper on a dining table, or use a bush or sidewalk in a theme park for your restroom. If you are not taught that there are some things that should not be done in public, then you will do them and see nothing wrong with it. When some parents started placing more emphasis on being a friend than a parent, a lot of courtesy and good manners went out the window and were replaced with entitlement and poor decision making skills. We've had a few generations of this now, so I don't see the trend reversing itself any time soon - although there are enough responsible parents here on the DIS that I haven't given up all hope. It's not just happening at Disney - it's happening everywhere. So anyone who thinks they can avoid these people by taking a vacation elsewhere is being very naive.