Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the teen was special needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the teen was special needs.
This would be my assumption. No matter what she looked like or how she spoke.
OK? Then a child with special needs needs to be seated in between the at least two adults accompanying them. No excuse for that not to happen.
+1. It’s not acceptable behavior. Unbelievable that people are excusing it here. Our society has lost all civility and manners.
Anonymous wrote:
Clearly someone with autism, OP, but I agree that this does not make it right. I'm assuming the parents are just glad to get their teen engrossed in something wholesome and not acting out too much - ie, this teen is capable of behaving much worse in other situations.
I have a teen with autism. He's high-functioning and quiet. This teen sounds more affected. I have a neighbor with a non-verbal autistic teen, one that is liable to elope, scream and hit. It's so, so, so difficult.
I'm sorry you were bothered in your enjoyment of the show. I can also guess at this family's daily challenges. There are no right answers, sometimes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the teen was special needs.
This would be my assumption. No matter what she looked like or how she spoke.
OK? Then a child with special needs needs to be seated in between the at least two adults accompanying them. No excuse for that not to happen.
Anonymous wrote:You were so passive-aggressive. Why not just say to her "Please get off my body." Say it as a statement or a directive, not a plea.
Anonymous wrote:We live in a combative world where people are recorded, cancelled, and harassed every day — sometimes for perfectly reasonable behavior. You couldn’t pay me enough to speak up in this situation. I’ll grumble about it to myself, but I’m not sticking my neck out to correct a stranger’s child in public. Not a chance in hell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know the mother didn't say or do anything? If it were my kid I would whisper to them or quietly write them a note.
Because the teenager kept doing it! Write them a note? It's the middle of a show at the Kennedy Center!
Yes you lean over and talk to the mom. Or the usher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you know the mother didn't say or do anything? If it were my kid I would whisper to them or quietly write them a note.
Because the teenager kept doing it! Write them a note? It's the middle of a show at the Kennedy Center!
Anonymous wrote:I understand that “Frozen” is very much a kids’ show, I was there with my husband and two young daughters. But still, the tickets were expensive. I am shocked that the *teenager* sitting next to me was sitting with her legs in Lotus pose, with her knee on me/my seat until I shuffled and bumped around enough for her to stop. What did she do next? She put her feet up on the seats in front of her—and yes, those seats were occupied by two women in their 60s/70s. She finally stopped that after the women shuffled/moved their heads/finally batted behind them and hit her feet with their hands.
This was all in full view of her mother and what I presume to be her grandmother, or maybe an aunt.
The teenager was also talking and singing loudly, and that, at least, the mother put a stop to. She was also constantly fidgeting and bopping around, just a total distraction.
I was surrounded by 5, 7, 9, 10-year-olds who were all better behaved than this teenager. I can’t believe the mother was right there, not saying anything about her daughter putting her knees and her feet on other people.
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the teen was special needs.