I have to agree. This may have been a needed lesson.I think it's commendable what this mother did. I like the no nonsense approach. This lesson will stick with the little girl. She just taught her daughter how serious her actions were. Better this happened when she was six, rather than sixteen.
I would think the embarrassment of them having to take the item back to the store and apologize would make a big enough impression. That, maybe coupled with a 'next time it will be the police' should do the trick.
Hmmm, I don't know. I bet she'll never steal again.
I could see how some would have the opinion that the mother over reacted. However, the opinion that the mother was just "passing the buck" is completely absurd.
Thats right your opinion, not mine. I think calling the police is completely absurd. To me passing the buck is not wanting to take care of the situation yourself so you pass it to someone else. IMOP, thats what the mom did. She didn't want to repimand the kid herself and take the responsibility of teaching the kid a lesson so she calls the cops on a 6 yo. Let the cop do the dirty work.
I have a 6 yo. My 6 yo knows there is jail. She can't comprehend yet how bad it is and what kind of people go there. Her little mind hasn't seen that much "bad " in this world to put it all in perspective. So for a cop to take her away and say, you are going to jail. I would feel it would make her more scared of the policeman in general than jail, since as I said she doesn't even know how bad of a place jail is.
And as a PP stated, I want my 6 yo to like the police at this point in her life and always for that matter, not make her scared to death to go near one.
I think it's commendable what this mother did. I like the no nonsense approach. This lesson will stick with the little girl. She just taught her daughter how serious her actions were. Better this happened when she was six, rather than sixteen.
The problem is that some people don't understand what "passing the buck" is. "Passing the buck" is when you evade responsibility by passing it on to someone else. You probably mistakenly feel that the mother didn't want to deal with it and just thought, "Ah heck, I don't feel like dealing with this. I'll just call the cops". This is completely absurd. The mother did not take this action out of laziness. The mother was dealing with the situation in a very brave and honorable way. She took responsibility for her daughter's actions and responded by teaching her a lesson. Having the police come was her way of driving home her point about stealing. This would be called "taking the bull by the horns".
Too many parents these days have become experts at making excuses for their children and "passing the buck". These same parents sometimes accuse other parents that are actually parenting of "passing the buck". In fact, they are the ones who are "passing the buck". This is called "projecting". Also, speaking of excuses... making the excuse that calling the police will cause the child to be "scared to death to go near one" is another absurd excuse. Police are well trained in how to deal with all sorts of situations. They are not going to traumatize a six year old for life. These excuses are just "passing the buck"...in my opinion.![]()
I agree with this. As much as I hate to say it, I think that the mother did the right thing. You can talk all you want about what you would have done if it had been your child. But don't try to pretend that every child is the same and should be disciplined the same way. I stole a piece of Brach's candy when I was 5. By the time I got it home, I was so beside myself with shame that I couldn't even look my mom in the eye. She knew that the guilt and shame that I felt were punishment enough. My brother, however, was always that kid who required a more "in your face" type of discipline. He didn't seem to come "pre-programmed" with a solid sense of right and wrong. I could totally see my mom doing something like this to teach my brother a lesson.
I'd honestly rather a mom teach a child the real life consequences of her actions than to take her home and beat the crap out of her.
Unless the child is a habitual shoplifter, I think the mother is a nutter.
A fluffer nutter or a nutter butter?
i think, at that age, little ones still need to see the police as being their friends. They need to feel comfortable approaching a police officer if they need help.
A 6 yr old would be scared to death in this situation. The big, bad police officer has taken her away from her parent, and transported her to jail. All alone, scared, helpless.
I would imagine being scared to death every time she sees a police officer is what will "stick with" someone this young,not so much "stealing is wrong". Definitely not what i would want to teach my dds at that age.
Marching her back into the store, asking to speak to a manager, and making her return the item and apologize would have been sufficient, imho.
The problem is that some people don't understand what "passing the buck" is. "Passing the buck" is when you evade responsibility by passing it on to someone else. You probably mistakenly feel that the mother didn't want to deal with it and just thought, "Ah heck, I don't feel like dealing with this. I'll just call the cops". This is completely absurd. The mother did not take this action out of laziness. The mother was dealing with the situation in a very brave and honorable way. She took responsibility for her daughter's actions and responded by teaching her a lesson. Having the police come was her way of driving home her point about stealing. This would be called "taking the bull by the horns".
Too many parents these days have become experts at making excuses for their children and "passing the buck". These same parents sometimes accuse other parents that are actually parenting of "passing the buck". In fact, they are the ones who are "passing the buck". This is called "projecting". Also, speaking of excuses... making the excuse that calling the police will cause the child to be "scared to death to go near one" is another absurd excuse. Police are well trained in how to deal with all sorts of situations. They are not going to traumatize a six year old for life. These excuses are just "passing the buck"...in my opinion.![]()
Ditto!
I might have done the same. I know I would have marched my son back there ASAP and had him return the item and apologize to the manager. It's what my mom did to me when I stole a handful of Walnuts (the ones you have to crack) when I was about 4 or 5. She discovered them in my little purse and marched me back in there.
She evaded responsibility by not disciplining her own child and called the cops to do it.