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General Parenting Discussion
Reply to "Honest question: what is the parent/caregiver’s rationale in letting their child…"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I have been that parent with my oldest. It typically happened when the kids were sitting in the front and the parents in the back, so I was physically separated from my child whenever he walked up in front of the book. I always felt like my getting up and physically moving my child or yelling at him from across the room was more disruptive than letting him stand there or the librarian saying something. Plus, this is what other parents seemed to be doing. I never saw anyone else getting up and moving their child. **This child was later diagnosed with ASD, which is probably why he didn’t pick up on the social cues not to get in front of the book (and why he didn’t respond to the evil eye from myself or the librarian). [/quote] I am so sick of hearing all these excuses for bad parenting and spoiled brats. Libraries are not playgrounds so why are you allowing your child free range in a library setting. The same goes for restaurants. [/quote] Well, as I said, he needed occasional reminders about socially appropriate behavior because he was three years old and autistic. What’s your excuse?[/quote] Then keep your child with you. If he can’t remember to sit then keep him sitting with you until he can. Now what’s your excuse? [/quote]
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