Anonymous wrote:My 8 yo knocks regularly on the door on one friend, unannounced. This kid comes to our house unannounced just as much. If either are busy they return home. Sometimes they play for 10 minutes. Yesterday it was 3 hours. I think it's wonderful to have a friend so close and I love not having to coordinate play dates anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA: please don't send your 1st-3rd graders to neighbors' houses without asking the neighbors first. A family is doing this in my neighborhood and it drives me nuts. I think the parent just wants some free time and tells the kids to walk to a friend's house. At first I thought some parents were okay with it but now I realize all the parents in our area are annoyed with them for it.
Oh give me a fucking break. I love how helicopter parents think some kids are just roaming the neighborhood because their parents don't want to spend time with them.That is how you rationalize your paranoia of letting your kids possibly go off and play. A child taking initiative to go find friends to play with is a GOOD thing and I won't be the Mommy who has to call/text another Mommy to allow it. The initiative, determination, courage to walk, be aware of their surroundings, knocking on doors and asking permission for a friend to come outside and play ARE LEARNING SKILLS that kids should have years before coddling parents allow them to. If you think your child can not do it is because you have held their hand, worried them with fear or have done so much for them they are oblivious as to how to actually do anything themselves.
If all the kids are playing outside, fine, but kids should not be knocking on doors asking anything as kids. You contact parent first.
Anonymous wrote:
I live along U Street, so I only let my children walk where I can see them. They have a friend at the end of the block and another right across the street. I'm never far away from them while they do this.
There's a corner store barely three blocks away and it's my dream that a DC will be able to walk over and buy a loaf of bread by themselves at some point. But, not any time soon. They are in 1st. By the time they are in 3rd, I should be cool with it. There are two busy-ish (no light) streets they need to cross. That's the issue, not the urban environment. Same with walking to school. There's a very large, busy street on the way to school that stops me from allowing them to go independently. Because they are such a known entity in the neighborhood, I think they'd have a lot of oversight on the way to school. But, that street is a huge obstacle for me.
Every once in a while, we practice by having them hold hands and pretend they're walking by themselves. I break the illusion and hold their hands while crossing that street, but we fall back into pretending once we've passed it.
Anonymous wrote:My 8 yo knocks regularly on the door on one friend, unannounced. This kid comes to our house unannounced just as much. If either are busy they return home. Sometimes they play for 10 minutes. Yesterday it was 3 hours. I think it's wonderful to have a friend so close and I love not having to coordinate play dates anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA: please don't send your 1st-3rd graders to neighbors' houses without asking the neighbors first. A family is doing this in my neighborhood and it drives me nuts. I think the parent just wants some free time and tells the kids to walk to a friend's house. At first I thought some parents were okay with it but now I realize all the parents in our area are annoyed with them for it.
Oh give me a fucking break. I love how helicopter parents think some kids are just roaming the neighborhood because their parents don't want to spend time with them.That is how you rationalize your paranoia of letting your kids possibly go off and play. A child taking initiative to go find friends to play with is a GOOD thing and I won't be the Mommy who has to call/text another Mommy to allow it. The initiative, determination, courage to walk, be aware of their surroundings, knocking on doors and asking permission for a friend to come outside and play ARE LEARNING SKILLS that kids should have years before coddling parents allow them to. If you think your child can not do it is because you have held their hand, worried them with fear or have done so much for them they are oblivious as to how to actually do anything themselves.
If all the kids are playing outside, fine, but kids should not be knocking on doors asking anything as kids. You contact parent first.
At what age, in your mind, can a child initiate something eg, knock on doors or set up a get together, without mom or dad calling the other parent first? 10? 15? 20?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA: please don't send your 1st-3rd graders to neighbors' houses without asking the neighbors first. A family is doing this in my neighborhood and it drives me nuts. I think the parent just wants some free time and tells the kids to walk to a friend's house. At first I thought some parents were okay with it but now I realize all the parents in our area are annoyed with them for it.
Oh give me a fucking break. I love how helicopter parents think some kids are just roaming the neighborhood because their parents don't want to spend time with them.That is how you rationalize your paranoia of letting your kids possibly go off and play. A child taking initiative to go find friends to play with is a GOOD thing and I won't be the Mommy who has to call/text another Mommy to allow it. The initiative, determination, courage to walk, be aware of their surroundings, knocking on doors and asking permission for a friend to come outside and play ARE LEARNING SKILLS that kids should have years before coddling parents allow them to. If you think your child can not do it is because you have held their hand, worried them with fear or have done so much for them they are oblivious as to how to actually do anything themselves.
If all the kids are playing outside, fine, but kids should not be knocking on doors asking anything as kids. You contact parent first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA: please don't send your 1st-3rd graders to neighbors' houses without asking the neighbors first. A family is doing this in my neighborhood and it drives me nuts. I think the parent just wants some free time and tells the kids to walk to a friend's house. At first I thought some parents were okay with it but now I realize all the parents in our area are annoyed with them for it.
Oh give me a fucking break. I love how helicopter parents think some kids are just roaming the neighborhood because their parents don't want to spend time with them.That is how you rationalize your paranoia of letting your kids possibly go off and play. A child taking initiative to go find friends to play with is a GOOD thing and I won't be the Mommy who has to call/text another Mommy to allow it. The initiative, determination, courage to walk, be aware of their surroundings, knocking on doors and asking permission for a friend to come outside and play ARE LEARNING SKILLS that kids should have years before coddling parents allow them to. If you think your child can not do it is because you have held their hand, worried them with fear or have done so much for them they are oblivious as to how to actually do anything themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA: please don't send your 1st-3rd graders to neighbors' houses without asking the neighbors first. A family is doing this in my neighborhood and it drives me nuts. I think the parent just wants some free time and tells the kids to walk to a friend's house. At first I thought some parents were okay with it but now I realize all the parents in our area are annoyed with them for it.
Why does this bother you? When they come knocking, just let your kid out to go play together. Ride bikes, sidewalk chalk, basketball, even "gasp" use their imagination and wander outside. No one is asking you to babysit the child but my guess is you can't let go of watching YOUR child's every move and you are judging the other mom for doing so.
Anonymous wrote:PSA: please don't send your 1st-3rd graders to neighbors' houses without asking the neighbors first. A family is doing this in my neighborhood and it drives me nuts. I think the parent just wants some free time and tells the kids to walk to a friend's house. At first I thought some parents were okay with it but now I realize all the parents in our area are annoyed with them for it.
Anonymous wrote:PSA: please don't send your 1st-3rd graders to neighbors' houses without asking the neighbors first. A family is doing this in my neighborhood and it drives me nuts. I think the parent just wants some free time and tells the kids to walk to a friend's house. At first I thought some parents were okay with it but now I realize all the parents in our area are annoyed with them for it.
That is how you rationalize your paranoia of letting your kids possibly go off and play. A child taking initiative to go find friends to play with is a GOOD thing and I won't be the Mommy who has to call/text another Mommy to allow it. The initiative, determination, courage to walk, be aware of their surroundings, knocking on doors and asking permission for a friend to come outside and play ARE LEARNING SKILLS that kids should have years before coddling parents allow them to. If you think your child can not do it is because you have held their hand, worried them with fear or have done so much for them they are oblivious as to how to actually do anything themselves.