Anonymous wrote:I’d think you’re being very dramatic about the potential consequences. Also what makes you think splash pad water isn’t just regular city water? It’s not stagnant like a swimming pool
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gave up on keeping my kids from drinking splash pad water loooong ago. This has never caused any digestive mishaps.
If you really want to walk up to me and tell me, I’ll roll my eyes internally, but whatever. You’re trying to help I get that.
Do NOT go up to my kid and tell them not to do something that has no impact on you or your family and is not objectively very dangerous. Real dangerous, not busybody park mom dangerous. If he’s about to fall off a cliff or stick a penny in a light socket or hit your kid, okay. Drinking some splash pad water? No.
Watch your kid and it won’t be a problem.
If you don’t want others parenting your child. You’ll have to stop being lazy and do it yourself.
Anonymous wrote:They all drink water from the splash pad, from the pool, etc. Life goes on.
No one is interested in a busybody critiquing a child that's just being allowed to play unless there is a real safety issue.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up on keeping my kids from drinking splash pad water loooong ago. This has never caused any digestive mishaps.
If you really want to walk up to me and tell me, I’ll roll my eyes internally, but whatever. You’re trying to help I get that.
Do NOT go up to my kid and tell them not to do something that has no impact on you or your family and is not objectively very dangerous. Real dangerous, not busybody park mom dangerous. If he’s about to fall off a cliff or stick a penny in a light socket or hit your kid, okay. Drinking some splash pad water? No.