Things that parents do - my pet peeves

Re: Judging parents for "forcing their kids" on rides...

FYI, there is no "chicken exit" for Haunted Mansion. We found that out the hard way.

DD (6) was fine till the "Lobby" where they close you in. Then she freaked.

I told her I would get her off...I PROMISED her I'd get her off. Asked the CM...NOPE! You're on the ride now!

WHAT?????


:eek::scared1::sad2::guilty::scared:

So...there I am...with a freaked out 6 yr old, whose Mommy had just "lied to her" (in her eyes), crammed in a stupid hearse, with her smushing her face into my chest (my suggestion) with her ears plugged.

Guess what? We GET STUCK on the stupid ride at the be-headed bride for 20 freakin' minutes! I have a sobbing 6 yr old begging me to tell her it's over... *I* was in tears!

H-E-double-toothpicks on earth!

Thank the sweet Lord for Peter Pan afterwards!:worship:

Don't judge, people...you have NO CLUE!


I am sorry but they lied to you. We used the Chicken Exit for HM just this past August. One of our kids changed their mind once the doors to the first room closed and the lights went out. There is an exit right outside that that takes you down a back hallway so you can exit. I am sorry you had to go through that but the CM lied if they told you that you couldn't get out before you got on the buggy.
 
Stupid is an awful word to use when refering to a child. I would never use that word. They may be uneducated but not stupid

I think it's stupid to call a child stupid. "stupid is as stupid does" said a young Forrest! :)
 
We do keep a routine in WDW because DD is 2 yrs old and needs her naps. She has never been a stroller napper and we know that her needs come before ours so at lunch time we head back to the resort, give her lunch and then a 2-3 hr nap. We go back to the parks and head home by 7:30pm because 8pm is bedtime. We are fortunate to have the opportunity to go to WDW at least once a year so yes, we do miss things on some trips because we can't go comando anymore, but such is life when you have children. Granted, DD is still very young but regardless I will not push her past her limits because we ALL pay the price :)

I'm with you - my kids are older, but at the age of 2, my kids got afternoon naps. It's easier now that they're older, but when they were little, our routine did not change for a vacation.
 
Here's my little WDW story.


Needless to say DD took a 3 hour nap and woke up just as angelic as if nothing had ever happened. Do I wish we had gone back to the hotel for a break, absolutely. I also wish I had some sort of warning before the meltdown but one minute she was sweet as could be, and the next minute she was heck on wheels.


This is why I think of tantrums like tornados. No warning and lots of damage. I was half chuckling and half crying for you reading your cautionary tale.
 

Please don't take this the wrong way, as it is simply meant "tongue in cheek" and just a joke, but I would cry too if I was given a veggie burger to eat while at WDW. LOL Eeeew! I tried one for the first time a couple of weeks ago and hated it. I know people love it, but it's just funny..not something most associate with an amusement park. Definitely healthier though! LOL

:) That's how my brother and SIL felt when I told them the story.

However, since we're vegetarian, there's not that many options out there. Alas half or more of it was actually Disney's fault, because they have WEIRD veggie burgers! I figured it would be a soy-based burger, something that has a certain taste and texture. But it was actually more of a "vegetable burger", made up of vegetables. I liked it. DS just wanted me to pick out the corn, green peppers, etc from it, but those things were making up the burger. It was an awful situation.

And I should have known or asked (so I take at least 1/4 of the fault), because a veggie burger at DL once was a black bean burger with cumin seasoning in it...hubby and I like them, but they aren't "normal", and all the signs say is "veggie burger", not anything more descriptive.

I gotta write a letter to DLR....





I alluded to kids that can't have the ice cream at Disney...most of DS's food issues were *discovered* at Disneyland! I discovered corn syrup problems at home with a lollipop (20 minutes later he attacked me, kicking hitting screaming scratching and I thought back to all those other violent tantrums and realized he'd eaten certain things right before they happened), but we've discovered what foods have it and HFCS, that we didn't think had it, at Disneyland.

Corn syrup solids are in Dole Whips...found that out as hubby (who later was diagnosed with diabetes but his endocrinologist is coming away from that diagnosis now, almost a year later) passed out on a bench after eating his portion, while DS ran around blindly and without hearing me, in circles, almost hitting countless people at the exit from Frontierland, after eating his portion.

HFCS and corn syrup are in Uncrustables, which explains a WHOLE LOTTA bad zoo visits, since they were a "treat". Good way to take a hot, tired, hungry day and turn it into a gawdawful day, carrying a kicking screamin freaking out kid to the car (and our zoo is several stories down from the parking lot, with only a ramp or stairs to get up the hill).

Mickey bars have corn syrup (thankfully I read the ingredients on that one). Most of the ice cream has corn syrup. etc etc etc.

So it's possible that screaming children are actually kids with the same sensitivities as DS has, it's just the family doesn't know it yet.
 
I don't mind being judgemental a bit about this, because I experienced it as a child and know how hard it is to listen to....my biggest pet peeve is seeing parents fight at Disney. The last time we went, I saw several different couples yelling and screaming at each other in front of their kids, and everyone else within hearing distance. I thought that was really awful and you could tell by their kids' faces that it was extremely upsetting to hear their parents treat each other that way.

I know how it feels, because I grew up with parents who fought constantly (including on every vacation we ever went on). It's terrible and ruins everybody's vacation. How can you teach your kids to respect other people if both parents can't show any respect for each other?

I don't think it's right that parents argue, and I've been an arguing parent (hubby's blood sugar issues can make him extremely rotten when he needs to eat...in a way the diabetes diagnosis has made our relationship 1000% better because it gives us an explanation for the attitude he can have).

However, I've been a kid in a household where the parents NEVER fought in front of us, and gol, that was really bad, too. We *thought* all was fine. But it wasn't. They were seething inside. I thought we were happy family, but we weren't...I actually had to do quite a bit of counseling, and even moved in with my mom and her last husband (good marriage) for a year, to feel what a happy family felt like from the inside, before I could start seeking out the Nice Boys, instead of the bad boys who made the "relationship" feel as bad as the relationship I lived inside of (from 8ish to 17) felt.

Fighting openly isn't always a bad thing, and NOT fighting isn't always a good thing.

And for us, it's almost always because hubby needs to eat, and all I need to do is keep my head clear and give him something to eat.

But by the middle of our trip, she had a complete meltdown in DHS. It started off with her running away and/or hiding behind trees. Each time I'd go and get her, she'd thrown herself on the floor and kick and scream (this was NOT my child). Then she started hitting and kicking and biting all the while screaming at the top of her lungs.

...but she continued to jump out and run away. Then she would do the whole limp body thing, while I seemingly dragged her along. She was truly evil on two legs that day.....she wouldn't stay in the stroller and would run off when not in the stroller. I thought I was going to pull her arm out of the socket between her trying to pull away and going limp all the time.

A very nice CM tried to give her a sticker and she pushed her! ....He had scratches all over his face, his face was bright red and he had a nice little shoe print on his bicep. Apparently, she beat the heck out of him and he was trying to hold her to get her to calm down.

Needless to say DD took a 3 hour nap and woke up just as angelic as if nothing had ever happened. Do I wish we had gone back to the hotel for a break, absolutely. I also wish I had some sort of warning before the meltdown but one minute she was sweet as could be, and the next minute she was heck on wheels.

I recognize that she's now 10 years older...but you just described my son from the point where we loosened up his diet (we were very concerned about typical food and environmental allergies and introduced things very slowly) until we were at the festival where he had the lollipop.

Inexplicable tantrums that were EXACTLY as you described, including passing out cold at the end of it. We got rid of those once we discovered the corn syrup, HFCS, corn syrup solid issues, and eliminated them from his diet.

I once took a picture of my face after a tantrum like that...he nearly scratched my eyeball during that one. Not fun.

When he was attacking me after the lollipop, it was in the kid's section at a big festival here in town...everyone was watching, no one was helping, no one smiled at me...I was crying he was hurting me so much (emotionally too), so I very well know how people can be while watching a tantrum. And I'd learned very early on, during his biting phase, that one is NOT to do as he's doing to get him to calm down...I once freaked out and bit him back, and I watched his eyes as he thought "OH, I see, that's OK now, to bite, thanks", and I wasn't going to teach him that hitting me was OK by me hitting him.

NO winning in the situation.



OK back to the lighter thread! These things just always bring up memories for me, because my little dude is such a demon when he has those ingredients, and I'm SO glad I figured it out. And b/c food things cause hubby to be really rude too...
 
A different one i have is parents that choose "cute" over comfort.

Now I LOVE to see the little girls in the princess dresses but PLEASE choose one that matches the weather and put shoes on that they can walk in. I have seen children in thoese silly plastic dress up shoes "trying" to walk around MK. We often go in winter when it can be cold but parents will not cover up the cute dress with a coat even when they have one on.:confused3.

We have done BBB twice in the last year. In October, DD chose Cinderella's dress with the plastic "glass slippers". I let her wear them to the photo shoot right after the BBB, but then I made her change back into her tennis shoes after that. She was allowed to change her shoes again when we went for dinner, but back to regular shoes when dinner was over.

Second trip two weeks ago, my mother had convinced her a couple of months in advance to get Sleeping Beauty's dress. Sleeves? But, when the day came...DD wouldn't have anything else. At least it was a late afternoon appointment. She wouldn't come out of that dress without a fight, either.

I will admit that, even though my DD is 5, we usually don't go back to the room for a break in the middle of the day. However, I always rent a stroller so she can ride when she's tired of walking, and she will decide when she's tired and knock out in the stroller. When this happens, it's a good time to either head into a store or just get a drink of some sort, find a nice shady place to sit (that includes shady space for the stroller!), and just relax for a while.
 
/
. Seeing an older baby/child carrying around a bottle. Looks just ridiculous on a 2 yr. old. Cut it off by 12 mos and transition to a sippy cup. Easy-peasy.

Sorry...I don't subscribe to that school of thought...in fact I think its kind of ridiculous. If my son would like a bottle before nap or bedtime, more power to him. No need for a security blanket, no need for a thumb. And in the August heat we will be facing, I will be sure he is getting more then enough fluids.

Because anybody who tells me he will be sure to drink when he is thirsty is crazy - you don't know my kid!

As a first time parent I tried to subscribe to all of todays "thinking" on raising a baby...I am done. I made myself neurotic. So thanks for the advice, but no thanks! Oh and look the other way if it bothers you so bad!
 
PARTIAL
Okay if we're making our list then please add those parents who feel the need to change their child - whether diapers or clothes - out in public in front of everyone! :scared1: Please I don't need to see your child's butt! And isn't there plenty of bathrooms to do that?

YUCK! ITA When we were at MK in April my DH had the boys in the bathroom and I was sitting on a bench waiting for them. A mom with a baby (about 6 mos) sat down on the other side of the bench and started to change the poopiest diaper that I have ever seen or smelled! No, "excuse me" or "do you mind?" or even a "sorry the potties are too crowded." She just whipped everything out and then placed the dirty diaper right against my leg. ICK!!! I jumped up and went over to wait by the bathroom door. It was disgusting!

Well I'm sure some of you might be criticizing me in November. My kids will still be expected to follow rules - especially where safety is involved. They will show respect to their siblings, parents and anyone else that chooses to speak to them. They will eat food before treats. And if they don't, you might hear a raised voice, they might be forced to sit on a bench in timeout and in some instances you might see me smack their backside.

My pet peeve is children that are allowed to do whatever they want, whenever they want without any consquence.

AMEN!
 
I am a smoker. There I said it - LOL!!

Anyway, I was a smoker before DD was born. I quit when I found out I was pregnant and then just before she turned 4, I stupidly started again (about 9 months ago).

SHE HAS NEVER SEEN ME SMOKE!!! EVER!!!

I smoke at work or in the backyard when she is bathing, etc.

She will never see me smoke!!!

Addiction or not, my child is more important to me than when I can get the next drag.

Also, knowing the strength of the addiction I would never want my child to start smoking. That is why I never want her to see me smoke!!

(Let me tell you it was easier to hide it from my parents as a teenager than from a 4 year old ;) )

OK. Of my soapbox now. I just think that parents do not "need" to smoke around their kids, and they have a responisibility to not harm their kids with toxins, or allow their kids to think it is "OK" to smoke.

As for other pet peeves - it bugs me when parents do not discipline their kids and let them run crazy.

Also, line cutting, or other rude behaivior that is initiated by the parent - come on, what are you teaching your child!!

OK. Done now :)
Thank you for posted that. It is good to know that some people can still smoke and not do it in front of their children. I like how you said she is more important than your next drag. THat is awesome.. kuddos to you. :goodvibes
Re: Judging parents for "forcing their kids" on rides...

FYI, there is no "chicken exit" for Haunted Mansion. We found that out the hard way.

DD (6) was fine till the "Lobby" where they close you in. Then she freaked.

I told her I would get her off...I PROMISED her I'd get her off. Asked the CM...NOPE! You're on the ride now!

WHAT?????


:eek::scared1::sad2::guilty::scared:

So...there I am...with a freaked out 6 yr old, whose Mommy had just "lied to her" (in her eyes), crammed in a stupid hearse, with her smushing her face into my chest (my suggestion) with her ears plugged.

Guess what? We GET STUCK on the stupid ride at the be-headed bride for 20 freakin' minutes! I have a sobbing 6 yr old begging me to tell her it's over... *I* was in tears!

H-E-double-toothpicks on earth!

Thank the sweet Lord for Peter Pan afterwards!:worship:

Don't judge, people...you have NO CLUE!
Oh my goodness! I think I never want to go on HM now..
That had to be such a helpless feeling!
:hug:
 
Sorry...I don't subscribe to that school of thought...in fact I think its kind of ridiculous. If my son would like a bottle before nap or bedtime, more power to him. No need for a security blanket, no need for a thumb. And in the August heat we will be facing, I will be sure he is getting more then enough fluids.

Because anybody who tells me he will be sure to drink when he is thirsty is crazy - you don't know my kid!

As a first time parent I tried to subscribe to all of todays "thinking" on raising a baby...I am done. I made myself neurotic. So thanks for the advice, but no thanks! Oh and look the other way if it bothers you so bad!

It doesn't bother me 'so bad.' OP asked my list of peeves so I offered mine.
Just ask your dentist his/her opinion. I hope you have good dental insurance. :thumbsup2
 
We stick to a schedule at WDW. It works for us. If letting kids skip naps and/ or stay up late works for others, more power to them. As far as "missing" things while on vacation, that's not a concern to me. Having fun with my family, my happy and well-rested family, is all that counts.

I don't think I have ever looked twice at what other
families are doing at WDW. I have no idea what other family dynamics are, so I try not to judge.
 
I don't care for parents who don't educate their children. And I don't mean just the A,B,C's and 1, 2, 3's alone (though seeing a stupid kid is pretty sad too). I don't like how some parents don't expect their kids to have manners, class, or even a shred of common sense.

Oh yeah, and let your kid have that cookie or chip off the floor in your house if they just dropped it. Dirt don't hurt!

I agree, teaching your child common sense, manners and just overall 'being nice' or treating people as you want to be treated is just something that you should do.

Last year while we were waiting for the parade a little girl decided to poor her water bottle out on the sidewalk behind me. Well, it slowly made it's way to my pants....at the time I had no idea it was water, I just knew it was cold and wet and on my butt LOL I turned around to see what it was and the mother/grandmother got all hot and bothered and started screaming "It's just water, she can get over it"....I was shocked to say the least. I mean, wouldn't "I'm sorry, little Sally....don't do that again" or even taking the water from the child (she obviously had no interest in drinking it) and saying sorry to the person who's butt was now soaked.....well that would have been proper but nope...lets take the low road and yell at the person like it's their fault, saying sorry is way way too hard and teaches little Sally to have common courtesy.

And on the 'eating off the floor' comment LOL, my MIL was over one day and I had just baked some rolls. One fell out of the bread basket on the floor and my youngest dd picked it up, blew it off and ate it. My MIL said "well, nothing goes to waste in this house does it" LOL Ummmm, my floors are pretty clean....and come on, it's a fresh baked honey butter roll LOL
 
Re: Judging parents for "forcing their kids" on rides...

FYI, there is no "chicken exit" for Haunted Mansion. We found that out the hard way.

DD (6) was fine till the "Lobby" where they close you in. Then she freaked.

I told her I would get her off...I PROMISED her I'd get her off. Asked the CM...NOPE! You're on the ride now!

WHAT?????


:eek::scared1::sad2::guilty::scared:

So...there I am...with a freaked out 6 yr old, whose Mommy had just "lied to her" (in her eyes), crammed in a stupid hearse, with her smushing her face into my chest (my suggestion) with her ears plugged.

Guess what? We GET STUCK on the stupid ride at the be-headed bride for 20 freakin' minutes! I have a sobbing 6 yr old begging me to tell her it's over... *I* was in tears!

H-E-double-toothpicks on earth!

Thank the sweet Lord for Peter Pan afterwards!:worship:

Don't judge, people...you have NO CLUE!

I am TOTALLY that parent that will "misrepresent" a ride to a child to get DD/DS to ride it at least once. DH and I convinced DS5 to ride EE. He saw all the train/camping gear and the trian style coaster so I emphasided the train ride rther than the speed/darkness/Yetti. Needless to say it took twice to ride (we didn't push the second time) for him to decide he loved the ride! Other "scary" ride we find the humor in...ghosts dancing, talking heads :rotfl:. The only ride that DD and DS have asked to not ride again was Dinosaur...DD tried it once and DS twice.
 
I am TOTALLY that parent that will "misrepresent" a ride to a child to get DD/DS to ride it at least once. DH and I convinced DS5 to ride EE. He saw all the train/camping gear and the trian style coaster so I emphasided the train ride rther than the speed/darkness/Yetti. Needless to say it took twice to ride (we didn't push the second time) for him to decide he loved the ride! Other "scary" ride we find the humor in...ghosts dancing, talking heads :rotfl:. The only ride that DD and DS have asked to not ride again was Dinosaur...DD tried it once and DS twice.


Yea, my oldest dd was getting a bit silly with all the rides on her 'do not ride' list. She was almost 11 and wouldn't ride RNR, TOT....etc. I bribed her with a stuffed Stitch, which we would have gotten at the end of the trip anyway as her souvenier. She absolutely LOVED RNR, she rides it over and over and over now. She LOVES EE, TOT, The Mummy at Universal...etc. Seriously without that bribe she would have never ridden any of that stuff though, but it only took 1 stitch and 1 ride on RNR to get her hooked :)

I remember my dad doing the same thing to me when I was about her age....at Six Flags on my first upside down roller coaster ride. I wanted out right when they were going to board the cars.....he said "NOPE" and I've ridden coasters ever since.

I wouldn't do this to them when they were younger though....my 6 year old dd wants to ride the coasters so badly every year. This past year she was tall enough to ride a few of them....but I just didn't feel she was ready and was only riding to be like her big sister. She'll probably get to ride them this year though :) since she's matured a bit more and I think she has a clear idea of what they are after watching some YouTube videos of the coasters LOL
 
:)



I alluded to kids that can't have the ice cream at Disney...most of DS's food issues were *discovered* at Disneyland! I discovered corn syrup problems at home with a lollipop (20 minutes later he attacked me, kicking hitting screaming scratching and I thought back to all those other violent tantrums and realized he'd eaten certain things right before they happened), but we've discovered what foods have it and HFCS, that we didn't think had it, at Disneyland.

Corn syrup solids are in Dole Whips...found that out as hubby (who later was diagnosed with diabetes but his endocrinologist is coming away from that diagnosis now, almost a year later) passed out on a bench after eating his portion, while DS ran around blindly and without hearing me, in circles, almost hitting countless people at the exit from Frontierland, after eating his portion.

HFCS and corn syrup are in Uncrustables, which explains a WHOLE LOTTA bad zoo visits, since they were a "treat". Good way to take a hot, tired, hungry day and turn it into a gawdawful day, carrying a kicking screamin freaking out kid to the car (and our zoo is several stories down from the parking lot, with only a ramp or stairs to get up the hill).

Mickey bars have corn syrup (thankfully I read the ingredients on that one). Most of the ice cream has corn syrup. etc etc etc.

So it's possible that screaming children are actually kids with the same sensitivities as DS has, it's just the family doesn't know it yet.

I bolded. I am sorry and I am not trying to be harsh but if your child is that violent after a drop of corn syrup then I am sorry to say but I think you should talk to a doctor about it. I have quite a bit of experience with food allergies and that is not a behavior (to that extreme that quickly) that seems in line with them. I am not saying this to be mean or nasty but as a parent I would really look into that. That is not typical of a food allergy. Eliminating the food might help but for it to cause such a reaction there had to be something else triggering it. Also, if he cannot eat any forms of corn syrup then ANY corn or corn products would also give some kind of a reaction. The veggie burger you talked about had corn in it. If he has a problem with corn syrup then he shouldn't be eating corn period.
I will agree with you though that HFCS is gross and we try to avoid it all costs.
Good luck and I hope you find out what the problem is.princess:
 
I bolded. I am sorry and I am not trying to be harsh but if your child is that violent after a drop of corn syrup then I am sorry to say but I think you should talk to a doctor about it. I have quite a bit of experience with food allergies and that is not a behavior (to that extreme that quickly) that seems in line with them. I am not saying this to be mean or nasty but as a parent I would really look into that. That is not typical of a food allergy. Eliminating the food might help but for it to cause such a reaction there had to be something else triggering it. Also, if he cannot eat any forms of corn syrup then ANY corn or corn products would also give some kind of a reaction. The veggie burger you talked about had corn in it. If he has a problem with corn syrup then he shouldn't be eating corn period.
I will agree with you though that HFCS is gross and we try to avoid it all costs.
Good luck and I hope you find out what the problem is.princess:

My son isn't affected by HFCS, but for him it is red dye #40. He gets awful facial tics from it. All it takes is one drop, and within an hour his tics are back. And he gets very antsy from it, too. Fortunately for us, red #40 is easier to avoid than HFCS.
 
My son isn't affected by HFCS, but for him it is red dye #40. He gets awful facial tics from it. All it takes is one drop, and within an hour his tics are back. And he gets very antsy from it, too. Fortunately for us, red #40 is easier to avoid than HFCS.

Oh I don't think that kids can't have reactions to things but the child in question eats foods with corn in it. He would have that reaction to that as well.
 

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