Anonymous wrote:I walked about a mile to and from school with a few same-ish aged kids from the neighborhood when I was 5 or 6. I don't really remember if my mom stopped chaperoning in kindergarten or 1st grade but the bus kids definitely still took the buses to kindergarten and some of them were only 4 due to when the school cutoff was in my district. This was in the 90s btw and I don't think any of us were traumatized at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it could have happened. Remember that was an era where Shirley McLaine put her then two-year-old on an airplane alone to Japan. (Of course the flight attendants took care of her, but still.) Did it happen at exactly that age? Maybe, maybe not.
Here’s what we know: whether she was 3, 4 or 5 at the time, your mom was alone on the bus, and it scared her enough to leave a lasting impression. And any feelings of stress and abandonment can stay with a child and, yes, cause PTSD.
We all have baggage. Sometimes we know exactly where it comes from, sometimes not.
Are you a counselor looking for work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I visited rural Nepal and the 5-6 year olds were looking after the one year olds. It can blow your mind when you're used to the DMV.
This was the norm in the rural/lower-middle-class South where my mom grew up too (in the 1960s). There was usually an adult sort of nearby but not paying attention.
My neighbor is very “free range” and her 8 and 10yr olds are always carting their 15mo old sister around in a wagon or just carrying her across the street with them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I visited rural Nepal and the 5-6 year olds were looking after the one year olds. It can blow your mind when you're used to the DMV.
This was the norm in the rural/lower-middle-class South where my mom grew up too (in the 1960s). There was usually an adult sort of nearby but not paying attention.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it could have happened. Remember that was an era where Shirley McLaine put her then two-year-old on an airplane alone to Japan. (Of course the flight attendants took care of her, but still.) Did it happen at exactly that age? Maybe, maybe not.
Here’s what we know: whether she was 3, 4 or 5 at the time, your mom was alone on the bus, and it scared her enough to leave a lasting impression. And any feelings of stress and abandonment can stay with a child and, yes, cause PTSD.
We all have baggage. Sometimes we know exactly where it comes from, sometimes not.
Anonymous wrote:I visited rural Nepal and the 5-6 year olds were looking after the one year olds. It can blow your mind when you're used to the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:I’m in another country but lots of the preschools here have buses that pick up kids and bring them home. They know the bus (more like a mini bus) driver and it’s very normal. I choose to drive my 4 year old but I have a reliable car and have the luxury of picking her up after her half day there. I don’t find this strange at all!