Anonymous wrote:I call troll
Anonymous wrote:This isn’t a real story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you’ll be hard pressed to find anyone who thinks you were in the wrong here.
This story is so egregious it sounds made up. If it isn’t, I’m very sorry you encountered such a badly behaved adult and child.
Think you may be onto something.
Anonymous wrote:I’m so sorry this happened to you. As a teacher I’m not the least bit surprised. I think most people would be stunned at how some children act today.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I have a child who uses a device. Not a cochlear implant but a speech-generating device. Kids often want to use it and play with it. I don't let them take it over and grab it but I will show them how it works. I'm not blaming you but you can explain to the kid what it is and show him how it works and that it is not a Bluetooth or another earpiece. I explain to kids that my child is not watching a movie or an iPad and that they can't play with her device.
In this instance, be much more direct with the mother to get it back. Politeness has flown out the window.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid was probably autistic and mom didn't want to set him off into a tantrum.
AUTISM IS NOT AN EXCUSE.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I am going to pick up on one of the PP's suggestions: circle back to the business and let them know what happened. Tell them that you definitely felt unsafe and that you may not be able to continue to patronize them going forward. Perhaps include that you were so flustered as well as frightened in the moment that you simply left rather than raising it at that time.
They may not feel they can take action given the delay in reporting, which makes some sense, but your call does get this on their radar. I would probably ask to speak to the manager and not the front desk workers - they can see so much (BTDT, there are some terrible, entitled folks out there) and can be hard to differentiate the merit of an anonymous call.
Also, while the child may have developmental issues, I would hope that the parent has developed better coping skills, including putting the phone away the very instance this comes to their attention.