Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You did the right thing, OP. Just because other kids are doing it does not make it right.
My kids are teens now, but I remember going to nice restaurants with my husband's family and his niece and nephew would get up and run laps around the long table. BIL and SIL did nothing; grandparents looked pained but didn't say anything.
Of course, our kids (roughly same age) wanted to get up and do that, too. I whispered no, you will stay in your seat. They asked dad. He said the same thing.
We always told them this is a restaurant, you will not treat it like a playground. No running, no yelling, no screaming, no tantrums. If you can't pull it off, then one of us parents will sit with you in the car while the other eat. You will not ruin other people's good time. This is how kids learn boundaries.
And your kids are perfect and your in-laws’ kids suck. We get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^PP again - caveat I would not allow him to go to the corner if he was whining to. Never give in to whining.
But she let her 3 year old go...right?
Anonymous wrote:^^PP again - caveat I would not allow him to go to the corner if he was whining to. Never give in to whining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You did the right thing, OP. Just because other kids are doing it does not make it right.
My kids are teens now, but I remember going to nice restaurants with my husband's family and his niece and nephew would get up and run laps around the long table. BIL and SIL did nothing; grandparents looked pained but didn't say anything.
Of course, our kids (roughly same age) wanted to get up and do that, too. I whispered no, you will stay in your seat. They asked dad. He said the same thing.
We always told them this is a restaurant, you will not treat it like a playground. No running, no yelling, no screaming, no tantrums. If you can't pull it off, then one of us parents will sit with you in the car while the other eat. You will not ruin other people's good time. This is how kids learn boundaries.
And your kids are perfect and your in-laws’ kids suck. We get it.
Anonymous wrote:You did the right thing, OP. Just because other kids are doing it does not make it right.
My kids are teens now, but I remember going to nice restaurants with my husband's family and his niece and nephew would get up and run laps around the long table. BIL and SIL did nothing; grandparents looked pained but didn't say anything.
Of course, our kids (roughly same age) wanted to get up and do that, too. I whispered no, you will stay in your seat. They asked dad. He said the same thing.
We always told them this is a restaurant, you will not treat it like a playground. No running, no yelling, no screaming, no tantrums. If you can't pull it off, then one of us parents will sit with you in the car while the other eat. You will not ruin other people's good time. This is how kids learn boundaries.
Anonymous wrote:If you just ordered and no food has arrived, I see no problem with the kids going to the corner, assuming that it's not close to other customers or in the way of the wait staff.
In general, I try to say yes to these kinds of requests unless there's a specific reason to say no.