Uh, no 8 year old boy does that. - mom of 8 yr old boy who would rather die |
You know what's not a big problem? Getting in the car and going home and showering there. Oh, big whoop, your hair will smell like chlorine for 15 minutes. Better than pedophiles AND making an entire locker room super uncomfortable. |
Which is why I have no problem avoiding the locker room altogether. |
This thread has really been a wake up call to me with a 6 year old DS. It never would have occurred to me to not bring him into the locker room with me. Does this apply to all public bathrooms??? Lots of places do not have a family bathroom and I am not comfortable with DS going to the mens room by himself at all. |
My boys just toweled off, pulled on sweatpants over their suits, put on a jacket and we went home to change. If it was frigid outside, I'd turn the heat up in the van. One of my sons recently mentioned how driving home in our cozy, warm van after a swim at the rec center is a really nice childhood memory for him. |
Yes this is interesting. I think 6/7 but I’m not sure. We belong to a club that does not have family changing rooms. You have to go through the locker room to get to the pool.
Today there were lots of 4 year old boys in the women’s locker room. |
I wouldn't let my boys go into a mens room by themselves at that age, either. I would take them to a regular ladies room in another part of the building or to the family restroom. Most of the time we just went home to change. |
There is a big difference in my mind between a bathroom and a locker room. In a bathroom, people aren't really visible, either the adults or the kid of the opposite gender. Everyone is just using a stall. In a locker room, people are obviously undressed out in the open to a varying degree. |
If there were a posted rule, I would follow it. |
Not all pools have family changing rooms!
Age: when the child can reliably change by him or herself, and alert others if someone is bothering them. That age will vary with the child. My son with motor disabilities could not reliably change in the men's until he was 7. Thankfully he's very small for his age and before that, no one commented at all. I have boys and girls. I'm also European. I don't quite understand why there are threads about this every year on DCUM. Elementary school-aged children do not have the same understanding of nudity as adults. They can stare, but without prurient intent. It may be more harmful for young children's development to verbalize fear in these cases, because they might grow up to be fearful of the opposite sex. |
Almost not a big problem - a mom with her son in the locker room. We aren’t talking about unattended teens or leering creeps. They are young boys with their moms, chill. |
The pedophile concern would be if you were forced to send your young boy into a men’s locker area. |
I would not send a six year old into a public locker room by themselves. My gym allowed boys age six and under in the women's locker room. However, my son was a taller six year old, and certainly by the time he was closer to seven, I could see how his presence would really be startling to others. My solution was to pop a towel over his head (like a hostage lol) and just walk him quickly into a stall where we changed, used the toilet, or whatever else we had to do. A bit goofy, but it worked just fine. |
Parents are wise NOT to send their young children alone into a public locker room. |
What about for dads with their daughters? Dads, at what age do you become uncomfortable with them in the locker room, and feel like they're leering at you? |