cheer25mom
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 25, 2013
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Yeah, I'm good at math. So I would leave my 10 year old on a bench outside Haunted Mansion. And I don't play the lottery.



Yeah, I'm good at math. So I would leave my 10 year old on a bench outside Haunted Mansion. And I don't play the lottery.
And facts are facts. No child has ever been abducted from WDW. On average there are only 115 stranger abductions per year in the US. Somewhere close to half of those are found alive and unharmed so less than 60 kids a year are harmed by a stranger out of the hundereds of millions. It is more statistically probable to win the lottery. There are many more things our there that carry orders of maginitude more risk with them, but we never thinktwice about them. Why is the least liekly scenario thing we are afraid of?
I blame the media.The least likely scenario is a terrifying, horrible, devastating thing that should never happen to any family. But because of the way we're exposed to information today, that scenario seems much more common than it really is, which leads us to think we should take every precaution to prevent it when we should be taking reasonable precautions.
Most people are claiming the side of this debate if you will, that disagree with not letting your child be left alone, that we are all psychotic, obsessive, bubblewrapping loons who need to control every move of our loved ones which IS delusional. Not EVERYONE who disagrees with you is over obsessive and controlling
All I basically ever said was that I don't personally like the idea of leaving a kid at 10 years old in a big place and that is MY opinion. Lol I never even disagreed with anyone until the backlash started. I also never said, oh my godddddd guys okay so there's abductors in every single area we go and OHGOD SUCH A HUGE PLACE YOU WILL DEFINITELY GET LOST.
I just am not willing to take that chance. End of.![]()
People think OHMYGOD WDW THAT MEANS WE ARE SAFE ALWAYS. Yes WDW is extremely safe, we all know that, but that doesn't mean you should ***.u.me and be delusional either.
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that also imo doesn't mean you should just go, "Oh honey I REALLY want to go on this ride and I know you don't like it so is it okay if I just go on and you can wait right here? I'll get you some popcorn and I'll be right back. I love you *pats head*" whenever you feel like it.
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So based on some of your assumptions, my non existent child would be forever dependent on me and afraid of the world because I would choose not to leave them alone in a huge public space at a certain age
Cute.
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This thread is a mess tbh.
Use a little common sense.
I would never risk my child getting hurt, lost or abducted, etc. At a certain age, okay, acceptable. Call me overprotective, but being a New Yorker and seeing how absolute flop the world is, I'd never risk it.
Seems pretty clear what you think of those that don't agree with you.
Seems pretty clear what you think of those that don't agree with you.
And facts are facts. No child has ever been abducted from WDW. On average there are only 115 stranger abductions per year in the US. Somewhere close to half of those are found alive and unharmed so less than 60 kids a year are harmed by a stranger out of the hundereds of millions. It is more statistically probable to win the lottery. There are many more things our there that carry orders of maginitude more risk with them, but we never thinktwice about them. Why is the least liekly scenario thing we are afraid of?
And no bomb has ever been set off at an athletic event in the US . Boston Marathon! One of the dead, a little boy.
A young girl abducted and found after 18 years..... Three young girls abducted 10 years ago recently found.
and on and on............... It doesn't happen a D. I pray that it is always the case and it is the happiest place.
Of course it does happen, but VERY, VERY rarely. Not long ago a train derailed near my home and someone was killed. I still get on the train. We still attend atheletic events, even after Boston. We all sent our kids to school this morning, even after the stories about these young women. All I am saying is we shouldn't let fear of something that is so very unlikely rule our lives to the point that we stop allowing our kids to do the everyday things they needto do to be independent adults. I see this generation's parents headed more and more down that road.
I don't live my life in fear of the boogeyman lurking around every corner any more than I do that an asteroid will hit my house tomorrow. Both could happen, and havehapeened to someone but I am not putting up a blast shield at home.
So if opinions are opinions, why all the talk about others being delusional haters?
I have strong, safe, not naive, adult children.
Yes I am aware of the surroundings before my child goes to someones house. Pool, lake, guns, trampolines, drugs? I even do a criminal background check.
As far as preventing the "danger," 10 year olds are old enough to be taught the safety basics. Stay where you are. Don't leave this bench or gift shop. If someone tries to get you to go with them, do not do it, no matter what they tell you. Just say no. If they bother you , get a CM's attention. If they try to grab you, scream, kick and fight. Yell "this is not my parent." It's a public place, lots of people are around, and there won't be a weapon like a gun to scare the victim into compliance.
Agree. No one is right or wrong here. I would not leave my 10 alone to wait because I wanted to ride. I don't think it's fair. This is a family vacation so why should that child be " punished" for not being comfortable with a ride. ( sit alone waiting is not fun at any age).
And. Many other things can happen beside abduction. Too many variables. Deciding to keep my child safe ( mentally and physically) is my job and this will not hinder him/her from becoming a stable, functioning, strong, independent adult. I have been very overprotective with my oldest ( now 16) and she has no problem taking care of herself. I have valued her opinion and let her participate in some family decisions. I have encouraged her and supported her and I never had to leave her alone at a park to "test" her independence.
But the OPs 10 year old is not my child. If you feel comfortable with it and your child feels comfortable with it and won't have hurt feelings on a family vacation because of it. Then to each their own.
I wouldn't leave mine as simply a test. I would however let her sit by herself outside in a heartbeat if that is what SHE wanted to do. For some kids, particularly mine, a few minutes of alone time is not a punishment at all, especially if she has a phone or her ipod.
I think that many of us have different definitions of "take care of themselves" . My definition at 16 would be could that child handle it if I dopped off the face of the planet today. Could she be totally independent and run a household on her own? Can she get herself where she needs to go? Buy groceries herself? Cook? Do laundry? Keep up with what needs to be done? Does she know how to take care of her car? Could she talk to service people and get it taken care of if a problem cropped up with the house, car ect? Can she be responsible for her personal safety in crowed places and unfamiliar situations? If I drop her in the middle of an unfimilar city, would she have the skills to cope on her own? Cna she get herself on and off a plane? Drive in a city she doesn't know? Because they will need to be doing all these things in just 2 years when they head to college. If mine isn't ther by 16 I wil definitely be pushing her to do more for herself. If they ahven't been left alone at any point prior, the odds are pretty low that they are going to be capable of these thinswhen they leave the nest.
Right. We're not talking about a gullible toddler - we're talking about a fourth or fifth grader. If the kid doesn't know how to scream "NO!" and get help by that age...you have big problems, as a parent.
Thanks to the many repeat commenters for your reasonable comments on the side of responsible parenting (the other side - the "police state" side hasn't been quite so well-said and reasonable). But you have to know you are beating your head against a wall. Anyone who has kids who are school age or recently school age has seen the shift in society in the last ten or so years. (Some teachers here think it started with the babies born after 9/11. One theory.) Four year olds are now babies and ten year olds are four year olds and high school kids are ten year olds.
The good news is that all these parents who want to smother and baby their kids will have plenty of opportunities to do so...all through their late teens and twenties. And thirties.