Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He left them in the car? I’m not sure what the issue is? I’m assuming he was taking them a hike or trip to dog park right after drop off, I’m sure they were excited to be going somewhere. Kids sobbing is on their parents. My kid is not scared of dogs confined in a car.
He parked in the no parking zone right in front of the door to the school. The door where new preschoolers say good-bye to their parents. You don’t see that as an issue?
These kids would have been crying and clinging to their parents anyway. He should not have parked in a no parking zone.
I agree with that but can you imagine the manufactured outrage OP would have had if this guy had dared PARK IN THE PARKING LOT and leave his HUGE barking and howling dogs there? Oh my, OP probably wouldn't have even made it home alive to type this post.
You quoted me and you really made me laugh. I don’t understand how people like that function in society. I feel bad for that preschool because I imagine many future emails from OP to them over “issues”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly surprised by some of the responses. What this father did was not okay, guys, not okay to do to preschoolers.
DCUM surprises me sometimes. I swear some of you aren’t parents.
There was a thread on here recently asking why adult women were so dramatic... this is why manufactured histrionics from very early on in life.
In watching experienced nannies that are with kids all day long vs parents that take their kids to the park on the weekend one thing I notice is how they respond when kids get scared or hurt. Nannies calmly take control of the situation but don’t panic or add to the child’s fear by dramatically fussing about. They check in and validate the child if he/she is hurt but they don’t create fear. Some parents absolutely lose it when their toddler falls on their bum or they are startled by a noise. It makes the kids so anxious and much more prone to reacting to everything dramatically.
This is very true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He left them in the car? I’m not sure what the issue is? I’m assuming he was taking them a hike or trip to dog park right after drop off, I’m sure they were excited to be going somewhere. Kids sobbing is on their parents. My kid is not scared of dogs confined in a car.
He parked in the no parking zone right in front of the door to the school. The door where new preschoolers say good-bye to their parents. You don’t see that as an issue?
These kids would have been crying and clinging to their parents anyway. He should not have parked in a no parking zone.
I agree with that but can you imagine the manufactured outrage OP would have had if this guy had dared PARK IN THE PARKING LOT and leave his HUGE barking and howling dogs there? Oh my, OP probably wouldn't have even made it home alive to type this post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He left them in the car? I’m not sure what the issue is? I’m assuming he was taking them a hike or trip to dog park right after drop off, I’m sure they were excited to be going somewhere. Kids sobbing is on their parents. My kid is not scared of dogs confined in a car.
He parked in the no parking zone right in front of the door to the school. The door where new preschoolers say good-bye to their parents. You don’t see that as an issue?
Anonymous wrote:I will never - for the life of me - understand a parent’s need to bring their dog to drop off and pick up. Never. It’s been discussed here frequently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He left them in the car? I’m not sure what the issue is? I’m assuming he was taking them a hike or trip to dog park right after drop off, I’m sure they were excited to be going somewhere. Kids sobbing is on their parents. My kid is not scared of dogs confined in a car.
He parked in the no parking zone right in front of the door to the school. The door where new preschoolers say good-bye to their parents. You don’t see that as an issue?
These kids would have been crying and clinging to their parents anyway. He should not have parked in a no parking zone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly surprised by some of the responses. What this father did was not okay, guys, not okay to do to preschoolers.
DCUM surprises me sometimes. I swear some of you aren’t parents.
There was a thread on here recently asking why adult women were so dramatic... this is why manufactured histrionics from very early on in life.
In watching experienced nannies that are with kids all day long vs parents that take their kids to the park on the weekend one thing I notice is how they respond when kids get scared or hurt. Nannies calmly take control of the situation but don’t panic or add to the child’s fear by dramatically fussing about. They check in and validate the child if he/she is hurt but they don’t create fear. Some parents absolutely lose it when their toddler falls on their bum or they are startled by a noise. It makes the kids so anxious and much more prone to reacting to everything dramatically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly surprised by some of the responses. What this father did was not okay, guys, not okay to do to preschoolers.
DCUM surprises me sometimes. I swear some of you aren’t parents.
There was a thread on here recently asking why adult women were so dramatic... this is why manufactured histrionics from very early on in life.
Seriously though your young preschooler isn’t scared of loud sounds and barking dogs??? I’m with OP, we were in a parking lot where a dog was left alone and his face was halfway out the window with teeth and slobber and he was loud af.
And yeah I guess many don’t actually have small kids on these forums anymore ….this place is changed for the worst.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe he was taking them to the vet after dropping off the kids.
Maybe the wife was supposed to drop off the preschool kid, but her car broke down and he had to take the dogs and the kid.
Maybe he took that illegal spot in front of the school so he could get in and out quickly because he had these dogs.
Maybe he looked calm because that was all he could do while people like you were judging him.
Maybe his dad is in hospice and his marriage is falling apart and he forgot he had to take the dogs to the vet and get his kid to school and his life just sucks right now.
Maybe you could just stop judging for 5 minutes and let this go. But for some reason you have to rehash it. It’s over. Let it go.
Anonymous wrote:This is an illegal parking situation, not a dog issue, not when the dogs were inside the vehicle at all times, even if they were barking.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m honestly surprised by some of the responses. What this father did was not okay, guys, not okay to do to preschoolers.
DCUM surprises me sometimes. I swear some of you aren’t parents.
There was a thread on here recently asking why adult women were so dramatic... this is why manufactured histrionics from very early on in life.
Seriously though your young preschooler isn’t scared of loud sounds and barking dogs??? I’m with OP, we were in a parking lot where a dog was left alone and his face was halfway out the window with teeth and slobber and he was loud af.
And yeah I guess many don’t actually have small kids on these forums anymore ….this place is changed for the worst.
I do but, no, my kids aren’t scared of loud noises and wouldn’t be afraid of the sound of barking. The dog part of this seems very over dramatic (all the parents and teachers emailed him…really?) but, yeah, he was a jerk for parking like a jerk.