Anonymous wrote:I would be suspicious of the persistence especially given an older kid should know better than to lead small kids away from their parents. It could have just been a lonely kid or really social kid, but yes I would have been suspicious. If your gut is screaming at you that something if off, trust it.
You could have also just said you had to go with them, but I do not blame you just just shutting it down.
Anonymous wrote:It would not have appear suspicious to me. I would have just came with my kid to see what was so cool.
Anonymous wrote:Suspicious for what? Geek potential?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a 4th grader wanting to show younger kids something cool is not even a little bit suspicious. Honestly, I bet he was even younger than your guess of 10-11.
Medicate your anxiety.
NP. I despise posters who do this condescending "Medicate your anxiety" crap whenever a parent doesn't "unclench" and let a kid roam off. You're telling OP (and by extension others reading this) that they should ignore their gut feelings about situations that come up suddenly, where a gut instinct may be all a parent has to go on.
An instinct that something seems "off" is not always correct--but it's also not necessarily "anxiety." I doubt you understand what real anxiety is.
OP, ignore jerkish PPs like this one.
Maybe the kid was indeed just alone and awkward and just wanted to share something with another child; that's the likeliest scenario. The answer would have been for you to say you would come with your kids to see this cool thing. I do wonder why you didn't just do that, which would have either ended up with the child taking all of you to see something innocent, or with the child balking at your presence and going away. But I do not question your hesitation in the face of what sounds like unusual persistence. Gut instinct is useful; don't second guess it, but do be careful how you react to it, so you don't telegraph so much fear to your kids.
Perfect response. I have a 7yo and found out over the summer at the local pool that *some* of the 5th and 6th graders are the kindest sweetest kids around. They were really interested in helping the younger kids or playing board games, getting them snacks etc. I imagine that it is a very between stages age where they are getting to be the big kids little kids look up to and also still remember being littler.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a 4th grader wanting to show younger kids something cool is not even a little bit suspicious. Honestly, I bet he was even younger than your guess of 10-11.
Medicate your anxiety.
NP. I despise posters who do this condescending "Medicate your anxiety" crap whenever a parent doesn't "unclench" and let a kid roam off. You're telling OP (and by extension others reading this) that they should ignore their gut feelings about situations that come up suddenly, where a gut instinct may be all a parent has to go on.
An instinct that something seems "off" is not always correct--but it's also not necessarily "anxiety." I doubt you understand what real anxiety is.
OP, ignore jerkish PPs like this one.
Maybe the kid was indeed just alone and awkward and just wanted to share something with another child; that's the likeliest scenario. The answer would have been for you to say you would come with your kids to see this cool thing. I do wonder why you didn't just do that, which would have either ended up with the child taking all of you to see something innocent, or with the child balking at your presence and going away. But I do not question your hesitation in the face of what sounds like unusual persistence. Gut instinct is useful; don't second guess it, but do be careful how you react to it, so you don't telegraph so much fear to your kids.
Anonymous wrote:No, a 4th grader wanting to show younger kids something cool is not even a little bit suspicious. Honestly, I bet he was even younger than your guess of 10-11.
Medicate your anxiety.