Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s 4. She saw something unexpected and she laughed. She doesn’t understand disability. She’s 4!
You did the right thing to talk to her about it, of course. Next time, though, the better talking point is “her legs work differently.” Not “her legs don’t work.” The woman with a disability isn’t broken. She’s different. And we don’t laugh at difference.
Some people’s legs don’t work at all. If this woman walked like a penguin then my guess is her hips/and/or her lower spine don’t have the rotation they’re supposed to. They don’t work right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s 4. You seriously thought she knew not to do this??? Sorry to burst your awesome parenting bubble, but…SHE’S FOUR. She saw someone walking differently. It amused her. You’re acting as if she knew the woman was disabled.
Relax.
Yes. I'm surprised because we have been doing what op said about teaching different types of diversity and bodied, and kindness.
This is a perfect example of how when you only talk this game, it doesn’t work. The talking doesn’t matter it you don’t have any diverse friends.
No, this is a perfect example of a 4 year old with no life experience not recognizing that someone was disabled. Which is ok, because the kid is FOUR.
Tell me your circle is not diverse, without telling me your circle is not diverse.
It’s cool, though - keep talking to your kids. But we all know that kids don’t do what you SAY - they do what you DO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Strange that your kids would point this out and make fun
I guarantee that the kid has seen adults "walk funny" on purpose, and did not realize that the woman was not doing it intentionally. She likely had no idea that the woman had any kind of disability. Kids walk like animals, hop like bunnies, take teeny steps or giant steps, etc. She's FOUR and thought the woman was pretending to be a penguin and thought it was funny.
Anonymous wrote:At 5 I would have pulled her aside, explained to her what you did at home, then find the woman and apologized and given the 5 year old an opportunity to ask questions so she could better understand people and their differences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She’s 4. You seriously thought she knew not to do this??? Sorry to burst your awesome parenting bubble, but…SHE’S FOUR. She saw someone walking differently. It amused her. You’re acting as if she knew the woman was disabled.
Relax.
Yes. I'm surprised because we have been doing what op said about teaching different types of diversity and bodied, and kindness.
This is a perfect example of how when you only talk this game, it doesn’t work. The talking doesn’t matter it you don’t have any diverse friends.
No, this is a perfect example of a 4 year old with no life experience not recognizing that someone was disabled. Which is ok, because the kid is FOUR.
Tell me your circle is not diverse, without telling me your circle is not diverse.
It’s cool, though - keep talking to your kids. But we all know that kids don’t do what you SAY - they do what you DO.
I just can’t get over your complete smugness in the face of your incorrect, idiotic assumptions. The one time I wish DCUM weren’t anonymous.
Dp. This persons response to you was totally ridiculous and obnoxious. I think you did the right thing talking to her about it afterwards so she can learn. 4 year olds aren’t expected to be perfect or have a “diverse circle”.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 5 I would have pulled her aside, explained to her what you did at home, then find the woman and apologized and given the 5 year old an opportunity to ask questions so she could better understand people and their differences.
As a woman with a disability I find it offense you want me to do your parenting job and educate your child. I'm not here for your performative apology. I just want to live my life, not be a disability AMA
+ 1 million. I use a walker. Sometimes kids ask why. My response is "so I don't fall". That's it. I certainly don't expect to stand there answering questions and would not appreciate PP's suggested approach.
Op, how about "it's not nice to laugh at people"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At 5 I would have pulled her aside, explained to her what you did at home, then find the woman and apologized and given the 5 year old an opportunity to ask questions so she could better understand people and their differences.
As a woman with a disability I find it offense you want me to do your parenting job and educate your child. I'm not here for your performative apology. I just want to live my life, not be a disability AMA