Anonymous wrote:While I agree you have to take better care of your things and put things out of reach of little children, it seems to me it is also the toddler's parents. I have a toddler (almost 2y) and if she was touching other's people stuff I would take it away from her, give it back or put it back and apologize. And every time she went back for it I would say "no" and remove her if possible. If it was friend's things I old ask them to put it out of reach, but ultimately, the responsibility to make sure my child didn't touch other's belongings it's mine. That is not hypothetical - intuitions like that have happened many times in the past year.
Op, I think you should be annoyed at the parents and ask them to please watch their child better next time and don't let him touch our stuff.
I am also mildly amused at the majority of answers here... Would you people really not take responsibility for your children's actions just and expect the other people around you to "move their things?" that explains A LOT about these bratty teens we see everyday. Entitled people.
If you are going to act this way your DH needs to "literally" act like a child was running around with several hundred dollars worth of your belongings.Anonymous wrote:To clarify, my friend saw her toddler with the keys AFTER DH did. So he wasn't the last adult to see her with them.
Also, DH didn't take them from her at the time because he was chasing after our own toddler who was running toward a ledge nearby. So because DH was watching both and they weren't watching even just their own, we're on the hook?
I definitely agree that DH should have done more and I'm annoyed that he didn't. But I also feel like the toddler's parents should have done more -- I mean, in the end, we're responsible for our kids. Second, what really annoys me is that the parents seem completely unwilling to entertain even the possibility that the keys might be lost because their kid was playing with them, and therefore, they have any responsibility for the fact that they're lost.
Replacing them is going to cost literally hundreds of dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Not trying to be snarky, but if the toddler had already taken the keys twice, why didn't your DH move the diaper bag out of reach or put the keys in his pocket?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To clarify, my friend saw her toddler with the keys AFTER DH did. So he wasn't the last adult to see her with them.
Also, DH didn't take them from her at the time because he was chasing after our own toddler who was running toward a ledge nearby. So because DH was watching both and they weren't watching even just their own, we're on the hook?
I definitely agree that DH should have done more and I'm annoyed that he didn't. But I also feel like the toddler's parents should have done more -- I mean, in the end, we're responsible for our kids. Second, what really annoys me is that the parents seem completely unwilling to entertain even the possibility that the keys might be lost because their kid was playing with them, and therefore, they have any responsibility for the fact that they're lost.
Replacing them is going to cost literally hundreds of dollars.
WTF were you and the girl's parents doing such that your DH was watching the girl swipe keys and your son fall off a ledge w/o any help?
Sounds like a lack of awareness and supervision on everyone's parts and you're the one who got stuck paying for it. Learn a lesson and be more aware when you are out with a toddler.
Anonymous wrote:To clarify, my friend saw her toddler with the keys AFTER DH did. So he wasn't the last adult to see her with them.
Also, DH didn't take them from her at the time because he was chasing after our own toddler who was running toward a ledge nearby. So because DH was watching both and they weren't watching even just their own, we're on the hook?
I definitely agree that DH should have done more and I'm annoyed that he didn't. But I also feel like the toddler's parents should have done more -- I mean, in the end, we're responsible for our kids. Second, what really annoys me is that the parents seem completely unwilling to entertain even the possibility that the keys might be lost because their kid was playing with them, and therefore, they have any responsibility for the fact that they're lost.
Replacing them is going to cost literally hundreds of dollars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Toddlers are toddlers.
DH is an adult who could have prevented this but did not. He let the child play with the keys without considering the consequences.
How is the DH more responsible than the toddler's parents (who also saw the toddler with the keys)?