I spent more time watching to make sure the toddler was OK than she did. And every time she realized the toddler was halfway down the block, she sent one of her other kids to go get the toddler.
....
Too many parents don't want to parent. Period. Not just at Disney. They want to have fun and enjoy their toys.
You watched the toddler because you chose to. She certainly DID notice when the little one was too far for her comfort, because she sent another child to get him/her.
As the oldest of 5, I will tell you that watching the youngers is part and parcel of being the oldest. When I was 2.5 and my brother was born I knew this. When I was 13 and my halfbrother was born I knew this. Same at 15 with the next. It's part of the JOY of my life, being the oldest.
Your situation at the zoo has NOTHING to do with not wanting to parent. It IS part of being the parent of several. It's also a matter of one parent having a different panic-meter than another parent.
They might able to tell the child to leave but they can't tell me that.
They certainly can! It's a private property and they can have you leave entirely if they wish to.
Since when is going on an amusement park ride such a high stakes activity that parents will create such cruel situations for their kids? Is it really worth it?
True true.
I've learned things about my family and my son's personality with every trip we've taken. When he was either an old 3 or a new 4, he protested Peter Pan at
Disneyland. He had been on it happily during that trip, so I KNEW he was simply tired (it was Magic Morning and an early one, it was the first ride) and I also know that even though the queue is officially not "indoors", it does get a little dark and spooky once you're properly in the line. It wasn't the ride he was protesting, it was the line.
I kept him in the line for those reasons, and also because the PP line at Disneyland is nearly impossible to go in reverse in. I've seen tall skinny people do it, but I'm not either of those things! So the only non-emergency way to get out was to leave once we got to the seating area. But once we were at that point, the line was done and the ride, which he did like, would start, so I took him on it.
After that experience and further experiences, we realized that we have to choose our early-morning rides more carefully. We don't WANT to force DS on anything, we don't WANT a situation where we have to do this because we didn't get enough sleep, etc.
On the OTHER hand, Dinosaur was too much for DS (years older) and I ended up taking him out of line for that. DH was trying to insist (it was early, we were tired, he was cranky (he being DH)) and I finally put my foot down once we were in the back-and-forth part of the line. It was a bummer, since DS had seen ride videos of it and was excited to go on it, until we approached the ride building and he got creeped out.
The ride was an unknown (apart from ride videos) to all of us, so there was no way we could promise him ANYTHING about the ride. At the next CM I found, I asked if we could leave. She was happy to do so, THANKED ME for listening to DS, and gave me rider swap passes so I could ride later on.
As DS and I waited for DH, who chose to ride, we saw sooooo many crying, screaming children coming from the proper ride exit, having hated the ride with all of their little beings. We felt so sad for those kids.
The idea of having a "rule" about "everyone rides once" just cracks me up.
I don't want to be forced onto a ride that literally scares me, and after all of our experiences we *now* know that NO ride is sooooo worth it that we're willing to force someone.