I’m sorry if you didn’t know this yet, but if you feed your 6yo solid food, they could choke. |
Ha! |
DP. My kids play lacrosse and also run with sticks. They aren’t kept low. Also, why are your kids standing in your yard throwing sticks? Do you have a dog that they are throwing them for? Why is this happening so often that you have to have multiple rules about it? |
| No running with sticks. You can poke your eye out. |
Wait, what? Is your husband blind now? Did he have surgery? How did this happen? |
Hit with a stick in the eye. Hit very close to the optic nerve. Vision cannot be corrected in that eye so it's permanently blurry. |
No surgery, there was nothing they could do. |
Were they throwing it *at someone? Otherwise MYOB. |
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They can run with sticks. Use them as swords, fight with them.
Lighten up Francis |
.But that same thing could have happened with a finger. Freak accidents are gonna happen. |
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I always wrap my children in 4 layers of bubble wrap and anti-septic tape, every time they leave their bedrooms.
You can never be too careful. |
| My kids are allowed to play, throw and run with sticks. |
They use one as a walking stick like your kids do but then get distracted by something on the other side of the playground. This, of course, means they must sprint at full speed to whatever it is, with whatever is in their hand at the time. OP--I'm with you on this. I allow walking and playing with sticks, but no running or climbing with sticks. If I had less clumsy kids, maybe I would feel differently, but it also feels so unnecessary. No one needs splinters in the eye, and the kids can find more sticks when they're done running. |
I don’t care about stick running but am vociferously against running with a lollipop in one’s mouth. Like 1000%! |
Have to say this is some exquisite trolling. #boymom |