Anonymous wrote:Whether there is a sidewalk is a huge detail you need to clarify. You do not have any right to tell someone to move from a sidewalk. I’m also curious what state this occurred in.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I went to my in laws house to watch MIL after a hip replacement. Their home is a corner lot that gets a lot of traffic. Someone drop their probably 10 year old kid off with a lemonade stand at the corner of the property, did not ask for permission and left the child there unsupervised. Upon finding this set up we gave the kid $40 and asked them to call their mom to pick them up because we didn’t know this child and didn’t feel comfortable having them on the property alone and inviting strangers to stop by and have noise from the stand as MIL is in recovery. Their mother came and was screaming at us, called us names and claimed we were hurting this child by not letting them have their lemonade stand at the corner of our lawn and that we were ruining their childhood. We told them to go or we would call the police. Did we do the right thing? What would you have done?
Anonymous wrote:I am shocked by the number of people who think OP was right in this situation. It sounds like the mother overreacted, but imagine how humiliating it must have felt for that child to be paid to go away. It's so absurd I wondered if OP was a troll. Yet, here people are, equating a 10 year old's lemonade stand out on the sidewalk to a hot dog stand? OP's poor MIL must be mortified.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lemonade stand in November? Poor planning.
Yeah. Agree with this and that’s why I’m leaning towards claiming this is a false narrative. My kid is the queen of lemonade stands, and they don’t make any noise and they don’t exist in November.
Anonymous wrote:Lemonade stand in November? Poor planning.
Anonymous wrote:Op was wrong /
1) not her property
2) possibly not her mil’s property
3) lemonade stands are adorable