Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To everyone saying "they meant it kindly" or "they were only trying to help", stop.
Impact matters more than intent.
Unsolicited advice is criticism.
DP. I said a ways upthread that, yes, this "unsolicited chastisement of someone else's kid" is helpful, for many kids. Often times, the kid will knock it off, when a stranger talks to them. It has worked a couple times with my ASD kid, too. Not when they are rolling around on the floor screaming (not really clear what OP's DC's meltdown looked like but it doesn't seem to have been at that level) but when they were rigid, stuck, maybe getting-to-meltdown.
All these defensive posts saying that people should never ever talk to a child are strange and living in s a strange world.
On what planet do you go around interfering with strangers’ kids having meltdowns or tantrums? Do you not get it? This is not “whining” or “rudeness.” It’s a momentary overload. I cannot think of a single justification for doing anything except maybe helping the way some PPs have described (picking up a purse, a kind word later.)
PP here. I am much too chicken to be able to say anything to anyone else's child. But I have had people, including cashiers, use "the voice" on my DC. Also teachers when out-and-about in the neighborhood, using their "teacher voice". Kids hear from their parents all the time how to behave. It can be very effective for a kid to hear it from another adult.
I don’t need another adult to parent my child *when I am right there* ffs. If I’m not there and they are supervising, sure. But to discipline another parent’s child when she is standing there? No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To everyone saying "they meant it kindly" or "they were only trying to help", stop.
Impact matters more than intent.
Unsolicited advice is criticism.
DP. I said a ways upthread that, yes, this "unsolicited chastisement of someone else's kid" is helpful, for many kids. Often times, the kid will knock it off, when a stranger talks to them. It has worked a couple times with my ASD kid, too. Not when they are rolling around on the floor screaming (not really clear what OP's DC's meltdown looked like but it doesn't seem to have been at that level) but when they were rigid, stuck, maybe getting-to-meltdown.
All these defensive posts saying that people should never ever talk to a child are strange and living in s a strange world.
On what planet do you go around interfering with strangers’ kids having meltdowns or tantrums? Do you not get it? This is not “whining” or “rudeness.” It’s a momentary overload. I cannot think of a single justification for doing anything except maybe helping the way some PPs have described (picking up a purse, a kind word later.)
PP here. I am much too chicken to be able to say anything to anyone else's child. But I have had people, including cashiers, use "the voice" on my DC. Also teachers when out-and-about in the neighborhood, using their "teacher voice". Kids hear from their parents all the time how to behave. It can be very effective for a kid to hear it from another adult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To everyone saying "they meant it kindly" or "they were only trying to help", stop.
Impact matters more than intent.
Unsolicited advice is criticism.
DP. I said a ways upthread that, yes, this "unsolicited chastisement of someone else's kid" is helpful, for many kids. Often times, the kid will knock it off, when a stranger talks to them. It has worked a couple times with my ASD kid, too. Not when they are rolling around on the floor screaming (not really clear what OP's DC's meltdown looked like but it doesn't seem to have been at that level) but when they were rigid, stuck, maybe getting-to-meltdown.
All these defensive posts saying that people should never ever talk to a child are strange and living in s a strange world.
On what planet do you go around interfering with strangers’ kids having meltdowns or tantrums? Do you not get it? This is not “whining” or “rudeness.” It’s a momentary overload. I cannot think of a single justification for doing anything except maybe helping the way some PPs have described (picking up a purse, a kind word later.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To everyone saying "they meant it kindly" or "they were only trying to help", stop.
Impact matters more than intent.
Unsolicited advice is criticism.
DP. I said a ways upthread that, yes, this "unsolicited chastisement of someone else's kid" is helpful, for many kids. Often times, the kid will knock it off, when a stranger talks to them. It has worked a couple times with my ASD kid, too. Not when they are rolling around on the floor screaming (not really clear what OP's DC's meltdown looked like but it doesn't seem to have been at that level) but when they were rigid, stuck, maybe getting-to-meltdown.
All these defensive posts saying that people should never ever talk to a child are strange and living in s a strange world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just want to say that I'm in a different group where moms are begging strangers to help be their "village". The example the mom gave was a child having a meltdown over not getting candy at the checkout line. The woman praised the cashier for also telling her child "no and you need to listen to your mom." Apparently the kid instantly stopped whining. In the comments people are so thrilled when strangers stop their kids from doing dangerous things at playgrounds, aren't playing nicely or are having tantrums.
Just wanted to throw that out because there are differing views and plenty of people wouldn't have minded the cashier saying that to your child.
Are these parents of kids with autism?
How would anyone know? And yes, I do think that many of the kids do have special needs.
I just mean that some people want help and some people don't. It's impossible to know which. I have been upset when strangers have not helped me in the past, but then I guess they've been yelled at by other moms. It's hard to win.
Pro tip: it is NEVER helping to chastise someone else’s child.
Pro tip: the village actually does work. For many kids, at many different times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just want to say that I'm in a different group where moms are begging strangers to help be their "village". The example the mom gave was a child having a meltdown over not getting candy at the checkout line. The woman praised the cashier for also telling her child "no and you need to listen to your mom." Apparently the kid instantly stopped whining. In the comments people are so thrilled when strangers stop their kids from doing dangerous things at playgrounds, aren't playing nicely or are having tantrums.
Just wanted to throw that out because there are differing views and plenty of people wouldn't have minded the cashier saying that to your child.
Are these parents of kids with autism?
How would anyone know? And yes, I do think that many of the kids do have special needs.
I just mean that some people want help and some people don't. It's impossible to know which. I have been upset when strangers have not helped me in the past, but then I guess they've been yelled at by other moms. It's hard to win.
Pro tip: it is NEVER helping to chastise someone else’s child.
Anonymous wrote:To everyone saying "they meant it kindly" or "they were only trying to help", stop.
Impact matters more than intent.
Unsolicited advice is criticism.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just want to say that I'm in a different group where moms are begging strangers to help be their "village". The example the mom gave was a child having a meltdown over not getting candy at the checkout line. The woman praised the cashier for also telling her child "no and you need to listen to your mom." Apparently the kid instantly stopped whining. In the comments people are so thrilled when strangers stop their kids from doing dangerous things at playgrounds, aren't playing nicely or are having tantrums.
Just wanted to throw that out because there are differing views and plenty of people wouldn't have minded the cashier saying that to your child.
Is that a SN parents group talking about their childrens’ public meltdowns?
I’m not that PP but it’s obviously not. An autistic child having a meltdown is not the same as a NT child “whining” for candy. Not the same. No one would look at a meltdown and use the term “whining.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just want to say that I'm in a different group where moms are begging strangers to help be their "village". The example the mom gave was a child having a meltdown over not getting candy at the checkout line. The woman praised the cashier for also telling her child "no and you need to listen to your mom." Apparently the kid instantly stopped whining. In the comments people are so thrilled when strangers stop their kids from doing dangerous things at playgrounds, aren't playing nicely or are having tantrums.
Just wanted to throw that out because there are differing views and plenty of people wouldn't have minded the cashier saying that to your child.
Are these parents of kids with autism?
How would anyone know? And yes, I do think that many of the kids do have special needs.
I just mean that some people want help and some people don't. It's impossible to know which. I have been upset when strangers have not helped me in the past, but then I guess they've been yelled at by other moms. It's hard to win.
Anonymous wrote:May I offer my perspective? Premature babies used to die. Often. Now we save many of those fragile children, who go on to have special needs at a higher rate. Furthermore, kids with special needs used to be hidden away. For both of these reasons, older people sometimes have less experience and compassion with our kids. This kind of it-takes-a-village mentality might have been helpful when dealing with my NT kid. It would be hell when dealing with my child with multiple special needs. However, fifty years ago, my special needs child would have died at birth. I’m not wording it well, but I think that’s why the people who do this to me are often older. I know for damn sure they don’t have a neurodivergent kid. In their world, they’re being “helpful”. I don’t have the right words myself, but it helps ME to think that they’re trying to help, unless the judgement is unavoidable.