Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is someone (or maybe more than one) who takes almost any mention of alcohol as an opportunity to accuse someone of being an alcoholic.
Unfortunately, I've dealt with alcoholism in my immediate family, so I certainly understand if you have trauma related to drinking and know your pain. But the mere mention of a drink doesn't warrant you throwing out snide comments about alcoholism and AA. Or maybe you're a dry drunk?
If a person cannot stay without a drink one night at a bar, I think that warrants an assumption of an alcoholic issue.
It seems it's more about quiet time/adult time and less about alcohol. I am sorry you've been hurt.
Anonymous wrote:At what age would you feel comfortable with putting a kid to sleep in a hotel room and then going downstairs in the same building to get a drink or hang out in a lounge? Assume kid has a phone and knows how to call the adults in an emergency….
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is someone (or maybe more than one) who takes almost any mention of alcohol as an opportunity to accuse someone of being an alcoholic.
Unfortunately, I've dealt with alcoholism in my immediate family, so I certainly understand if you have trauma related to drinking and know your pain. But the mere mention of a drink doesn't warrant you throwing out snide comments about alcoholism and AA. Or maybe you're a dry drunk?
If a person cannot stay without a drink one night at a bar, I think that warrants an assumption of an alcoholic issue.
Anonymous wrote:Some people on this post err on the side of hysterical.
Obviously, a 3-year-old should not be left alone. At a certain point though, it really depends on the child, but generally, I think 12 is fine, especially if there are some ground rules and they have a phone.
Anonymous wrote:There is someone (or maybe more than one) who takes almost any mention of alcohol as an opportunity to accuse someone of being an alcoholic.
Unfortunately, I've dealt with alcoholism in my immediate family, so I certainly understand if you have trauma related to drinking and know your pain. But the mere mention of a drink doesn't warrant you throwing out snide comments about alcoholism and AA. Or maybe you're a dry drunk?
Anonymous wrote:Not spending every waking moment with your teen on vacation = not wanting to parent? Huh.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, I’m not reading 15 pages of this, but I can’t believe how uptight most of dcum is.
Didn’t you all go on class trips and stay in hotel rooms without adults? I recall being 11-12 in a room with friends. What’s wrong with that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At what age can a person stay in a hotel room alone for a few hours? That is the question.
There are age requirements in many states that a child must be supervised. Maryland is age 13.
Anonymous wrote:There is someone (or maybe more than one) who takes almost any mention of alcohol as an opportunity to accuse someone of being an alcoholic.
Unfortunately, I've dealt with alcoholism in my immediate family, so I certainly understand if you have trauma related to drinking and know your pain. But the mere mention of a drink doesn't warrant you throwing out snide comments about alcoholism and AA. Or maybe you're a dry drunk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We bring our Ring Stick camera and do this. Our phone is set to notify us of any motion or sounds. Super easy to keep tabs and check on them while they sleep. What else are we going to do for 3-4 hours when our kid goes to bed at 6pm when we are on the West Coast?
Oh, I don’t know. Read a book, have a drink in the room, be a parent. I know, hard to fill in those hours.
Some kids won't sleep if there is light or any noise in the room. So if your kid goes to sleep at 6 or 7 pm, that means you and your partner have to sit silently in the dark until you, too go to sleep. It sucks.
Though this is why, when our kid was that age, we either did hotel suites or got Airbnbs. We only did just a regular hotel room a few times and it was miserable. One of those times (kid was around 18mo I think) we tried to just sit and read in bed until she fell asleep. Ha! The excitement of the hotel room plus having a light on meant she was absolutely bouncing off the walls. We really did have to turn off all the lights and just go to sleep at 8:30pm or she was just not going to go to sleep. But that was when we were driving cross country and had limited options for where we could stay. If we had a choice at all, we'd pick something with more than one room. Or even just a balcony or something -- just somewhere we can go and talk and have a drink or something while our kid sleeps.
But I don't think OP is talking about little kids. I don't know anyone who would leave a baby or toddler alone in a hotel room and go down to the lobby. Once our kid was 5 or 6, we just let her stay up late when we stay at hotels. We'd go out to dinner and then walk around for a bit or get dessert somewhere, and by the time we got back to the room she'd be ready to pass out and we could still stay up and talk, read, even watch TV without her waking up.