Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait what?? You contact the driver however you can (in this case by just speaking with them!) and you offer to fix the damage you caused.
You don't just go around the world showing your kids it's ok to damage other people's property and then just breeze about your life.
THIS THIS THIS
Anonymous wrote:Door dings are a part of living in a bigger city/suburban area. I generally park away from people because I want space to open and close doors, etc, but, if someone dinged my door and left a note, I'd never call them and ask for payment. These things just happen.
Frankly, I worry that leaving a note with your number is asking for a $5000 claim for "damage" that wasn't there.
Anonymous wrote:Wait what?? You contact the driver however you can (in this case by just speaking with them!) and you offer to fix the damage you caused.
You don't just go around the world showing your kids it's ok to damage other people's property and then just breeze about your life.
Anonymous wrote:I would use at as a teaching moment--you always leave a note, because you never know who was watching and might leave their own note. Or when the police were parked nearby and saw the whole thing, etc.
The vast majority of the time, the car owner will appreciate the note and won't care at all about a minor dink.
Anonymous wrote:I would be mortified if my child dinged a car door, the driver was right there, and I didn’t say something. That’s setting a really bad example. I refuse to believe this is something that “just happens” so the other person should get over it. You as the parent take responsibility for what your child does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would use at as a teaching moment--you always leave a note, because you never know who was watching and might leave their own note. Or when the police were parked nearby and saw the whole thing, etc.
The vast majority of the time, the car owner will appreciate the note and won't care at all about a minor dink.
+1.
But then I am a freaking law-abiding model citizen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here -- fwiw, kids are 14 and 11. I just said to the 11 yr old, "be careful opening the door"... of course, he didn't hear me b/c he was focussed on chasing a fly around the back seat. Then he opened the door hitting the car next to us (and the driver was IN the car!
I was not happy with 11 yr old. I know it wasn't intentional, and mistakes happen, but I wish kids would think about something other than themselves once in awhile. And, no... I didn't say anything to the other driver b/c I didn't know what to do. Should I have pulled out $40? That's all I had on me.
Just trying to get a feel for what most people actually do.
Wait a minute. Your child dinged the car next to yours when opening their door WHILE the person was in their car? OP, you just modeled and taught your child to be extremely rude and, quite ironic to your own post, to think even more about just themselves. Of course you address a person who is right there in the car next to you. Big fail OP.
Anonymous wrote:What does you "note" say?
"My kid scratched the paint on your car, call me for payment"?