Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My question is: why are some people so ageist?
OP this is about your mother. Not about legions of older adults. Get a clue. Also, it's "older adults" not "elderly people."
Finally, you are just like your mom. You want her to have compassion, yet you have none for her.
Your mom isn’t exactly wrong. This kid had an huge, violent loud meltdown because she was trying to make nice small chat with him. That can be off putting for anyone. At least now she knows to not try to speak to little kids in any capacity like she used to. Win-win.
Anonymous wrote:My question is: why are some people so ageist?
OP this is about your mother. Not about legions of older adults. Get a clue. Also, it's "older adults" not "elderly people."
Finally, you are just like your mom. You want her to have compassion, yet you have none for her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At the very least, this mom should have a phrase to say to people when the boy acts this way. “I apologize. He has some challenges we we working through” or whatever. And I say this as a mom of a child with ADHD who is prone to bouts of inappropriate behavior. It’s odd to me the mother didn’t apologize for her child’s behavior and I think that is the main issue.
Honestly, I'm not in this parenting situation myself, but I think if strangers decide to chat with random children they get what they get. Calming my child would have been more important than yelling an apology over his cries.
Anonymous wrote:At the very least, this mom should have a phrase to say to people when the boy acts this way. “I apologize. He has some challenges we we working through” or whatever. And I say this as a mom of a child with ADHD who is prone to bouts of inappropriate behavior. It’s odd to me the mother didn’t apologize for her child’s behavior and I think that is the main issue.
Anonymous wrote:Team your Mom here.
Your Mom grew up in an era when the elderly were respected. Young Mom's would have been apologetic to those around them if their kid had a meltdown in the grocery store.
Anonymous wrote:My question is: why are some people so ageist?
OP this is about your mother. Not about legions of older adults. Get a clue. Also, it's "older adults" not "elderly people."
Finally, you are just like your mom. You want her to have compassion, yet you have none for her.
Anonymous wrote:I’m at a loss with my mother. She’s in her mid-70s. I was out at the grocery store with her and we were in line when she caught the eye of one of two little boys in line behind her. The first boy carried on a short conversation with her, and then she moved on to converse with the other boy, only this caused him to have a mini-meltdown, stomping, pulling his hair and loudly screaming NO! NO! NO! at my mother. The mother of the boy simply tried to calm the boy down and ignored my mother.
In the car my mother couldn’t believe how the boy had “treated her”, and chastised the mother for not correcting him or apologizing for him. “She just let him act that way and speak to me like that!” I attempted to explain that he was likely autistic, or otherwise differently-abled, but she wasn’t having it.
Why are they so clueless about these disabilities yet claim to know everything about literally anything else?
Anonymous wrote:Because your mother is from a time when anyone different was institutionalized or otherwise not allowed to leave the house. She’s unwilling to accept the world has changed and she needs to as well.