| I'd gladly be called a helicopter over having my kid snatched. |
| I think kids need the experience of being able to walk around independently but it needs to be balanced with safety. I see nothing wrong with letting an 8+ yr old go to the next aisle in the grocery store to pick up one product -- if they have specific instructions to walk straight there and back, if they don’t return in x minutes, you’re walking to that aisle etc. After all, if they started screaming, you’d hear them if you were in the next aisle. Not to mention, I'd do this while the store was relatively busy, as there would likely be plenty of adults like the posters here who would notice a content 8 yr old picking up a box of cereal one moment who then started screaming as he was carried against his will; a criminal would not choose such an aisle where he’d have to navigate through the bunch of people/carts to get the kid out. In contrast, to let your kid wander in some other department of a store or hang out in the kids section of B&N alone while you are off getting coffee on the other side of the floor is insane. I also find that certain sections of WMT/Target are always pretty empty -- automotive, toys -- esp in the middle of the week, gardening, fitting rooms which are often way in the back etc. Someone could easily wander off with a child there and be unnoticed, as the one shopper who is absentmindedly wandering the automotive aisles may not even notice, may assume that it’s just a kid throwing a tantrum with their dad, or may not want to get involved being that they’re all alone. |
| I just showed my kids (6, 8 & 10). Thanks for posting. |
B/c they are stupid. My oldest is 7 and I am constantly explaining that I always need to be able to see him in a store or any public place. I wouldn't show kids this video to make a point; you might terrify them. My kid may think I'm a pain now, but someday he will undrstand. |
| If you don't give your child a little reign, it will be much more difficult for them when they find themselves alone. Seven is plenty old enough to go to another aisle alone. Yes, bad things can happen, but they can in any situation. This is entirely out of the ordinary, and the parents had let the kid learn enough that she dealt with it well. If you keep your kids tethered to you, they will have know idea hw to protect themselves when they are not. |
|
Wow. I am to blame for letting my son play in the "boy" toy section while I'm looking at the pink stuff with my daughter. Usually it's an aisle or two over and I keep calling out his name. No more.
He's 6 and I'll be showing him the video. I'd rather him be scared than someone trying to steal him. This is so scary. How many parents are showing this to your child? |
| What about leaving your kids, age 3 and 5, alone for 10 minutes at a Caps game while you go to get popcorn? |
| Yet another released criminal who should have remained incarcerated. |
Mine are similar ages & I'm showing it to them too. |
You know, it's not a bad idea to practice, and really get your kids to try yelling as loudly and clearly as they can. When my son was that age, we'd role play a bit, too, and talk scenarios. |
I've done this. |
| OP, Thank you for posting this. It helped me get the point across to DH that he was wrong to leave our 7 year-old son at one store in the mall while going to another with our younger daughter. |
Have you been in Walmart? Grocery is nowhere near toys. That was not just an isle or two over. That was across the store. |
| Do you all let your 7 year old walk to school? Just thinking if the answer is, yes, how much safer or more dangerous is that versus being separated by a couple of aisles in a store? |
. Are you kidding me? Of course not. |