Anonymous wrote:Wow. I'm surprised at all of these responses - NP here. How far are you from FH metro? If anything pick him up There, although that is highly unnecessary to me. Though I am also a new yorker who began riding the bus and train by myself at 10 or 11 and by 13 I was going an hour each way on two different trains.
The trains are NOT deserted after rush hour (these posters just probably don't ride enough to know). You can tell him to avoid the first and last car, which are less full. Teach him exactly how to go and hell be fine.
I cannot believe how over-sheltered children are now. How on earth do you expect them to become self-sufficient?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I'm surprised at all of these responses - NP here. How far are you from FH metro? If anything pick him up There, although that is highly unnecessary to me. Though I am also a new yorker who began riding the bus and train by myself at 10 or 11 and by 13 I was going an hour each way on two different trains.
The trains are NOT deserted after rush hour (these posters just probably don't ride enough to know). You can tell him to avoid the first and last car, which are less full. Teach him exactly how to go and hell be fine.
I cannot believe how over-sheltered children are now. How on earth do you expect them to become self-sufficient?
Me too. Until Etan Patz. That changed everything for my parents.
My children are younger, but I can't really imagine letting them ride the Metro by themselves. Then again, I see tons of kids getting off the Tenleytown metro each morning to go to school - I assume Deal? They must be 13 or younger?
Like the PP mentioned Etan Patz was six. I started riding the NYC subway at 12 (female) and yes, with 2-3 transfers and late at night after practice. I think he'd be fine but then again once it's time for my child to start going alone I'll be a nervous wreck.![]()
I am the pp you quoted. I don't mean to make light of any tragedy, but etan patz was 6, and this is why you try to prepare yourself and loved ones to be smart, secure responsible citizens. We cannot avoid all danger in life. This is how I feel. I think not allowing a thirteen year old to ride the metro alone, at least before ten pm, is too overprotective. Of course that is ones parenting choice.
OP, if you choose not to let him do this, please do not explain that metro is too unsafe or that he is not old enough- you don't want him to feel it is an inherently unsafe activity.
I'm the pp you quoted. Yeah.... Terrible things happen. I don't mean to make light of any tragedy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I'm not worried about the changing trains, just that he hasn't done it. I know the red and green lines well, but don't ride yellow or blue much at all, because no where that we go regularly is on the lines. In fact, until your post it didn't occur to me that King Street could be on both lines.
The after dark part is what worries me, but I'm not sure why. I probably wouldn't think twice about him being on the metro at 7 in the summer because it's "light", but I'm not sure why that matters to me in an indoor setting.
They are all the same. Just go over the map with him and make sure he understands which way to board and how it works. Not a bad idea to do it with him or a friend once. If you do it together, you can even get him thinking- which car would make sense for me to get on to be closer to my exit? Get him to take some ownership of it. He will be fine.
I know what you mean re:darkness. Darkness just has that connotation of night and danger. But 7 or 8 or 9 is different than 11 or 12. I promise.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm not worried about the changing trains, just that he hasn't done it. I know the red and green lines well, but don't ride yellow or blue much at all, because no where that we go regularly is on the lines. In fact, until your post it didn't occur to me that King Street could be on both lines.
The after dark part is what worries me, but I'm not sure why. I probably wouldn't think twice about him being on the metro at 7 in the summer because it's "light", but I'm not sure why that matters to me in an indoor setting.
Anonymous wrote:Pp with the daughter who rode after dark here. I can see your worry about your son riding at night. You can always role play with him what he would do if he ran into trouble. But I'm surprised about worrying about him changing trains. That seems pretty straightforward. Maybe you could do it with him once and walk him through it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you choose not to let him do this, please do not explain that metro is too unsafe or that he is not old enough- you don't want him to feel it is an inherently unsafe activity.
I'm the pp you quoted. Yeah.... Terrible things happen. I don't mean to make light of any tragedy.
OP here,
DC's been riding the metro and metrobus for about a year and a half to various red line destinations, and I'm confident that I'll let DC ride there, it's just home that I'm unsure about, so I definitely won't be communicating that metro in general is unsafe.
The "new" dimensions are riding after dark, and changing trains.
I will say that I would have been a little more concerned about my kid changing at Gallery Place, because that's a place that teens hang out and on occasion there's been trouble there. My kid changed trains at metro center which is not a hangout for kids at all. So, to be absolutely sure you could have your son take the blue line (assuming it's a station on blue and yellow lines) and change at metro center. But that might be a longer ride, so that seems like a lot of trouble. Well, ultimately, OP, you have to do what you feel comfortable with. You can always work your way into having him come home alone on metro later. Good luck with your decision!
Pp with the daughter who rode after dark here. I can see your worry about your son riding at night. You can always role play with him what he would do if he ran into trouble. But I'm surprised about worrying about him changing trains. That seems pretty straightforward. Maybe you could do it with him once and walk him through it.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, if you choose not to let him do this, please do not explain that metro is too unsafe or that he is not old enough- you don't want him to feel it is an inherently unsafe activity.
I'm the pp you quoted. Yeah.... Terrible things happen. I don't mean to make light of any tragedy.
OP here,
DC's been riding the metro and metrobus for about a year and a half to various red line destinations, and I'm confident that I'll let DC ride there, it's just home that I'm unsure about, so I definitely won't be communicating that metro in general is unsafe.
The "new" dimensions are riding after dark, and changing trains.
Anonymous wrote:OP, if you choose not to let him do this, please do not explain that metro is too unsafe or that he is not old enough- you don't want him to feel it is an inherently unsafe activity.
I'm the pp you quoted. Yeah.... Terrible things happen. I don't mean to make light of any tragedy.