Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would hire a sitter and leave the kids behind. I wouldn't want my kids running around a house with guns, unsupervised. No reasonable parent would. If they were going to a gun-owning friend's house and I trusted the parents to supervise carefully (and take reasonable precautions to lock up the guns) I wouldn't have an issue with that.
Same with swimming pools. We went to a big party that was around an unfenced swimming pull. It was nerve-racking and I wouldn't take my kids to another party there; I had to watch my kids like a hawk. Not an enjoyable event at all.
You sound like a ball of fun. And a bit nutty to boot.
Anonymous wrote:I suggest you talk to your sister.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister is getting married at her home in TX this summer, and her fiancé is the proud owner of many guns. My young children (2, 5, and 7) will be there in the wedding and the reception. I am concerned about the guns. When I have asked my sister where the guns will be, all she responds is "locked up" but is refusing to tell me how or where. Do I have a right to know where the "locked up" guns will be? How would you handle this type of situation? We are not a weapon carrying family, my kids are explorers, and weddings can get crazy with everyone being distracted (I am the matron of honor and my husband is also in the wedding). Am I being unreasonable to demand to know where exactly the guns are kept?
No. You have zero right to know. Choose not to go if you don't trust your sister and her husband. They have every right to keep that info. confidential. They wouldn't be so moronic as to leave guns out for kids to play with.
Anonymous wrote:My sister is getting married at her home in TX this summer, and her fiancé is the proud owner of many guns. My young children (2, 5, and 7) will be there in the wedding and the reception. I am concerned about the guns. When I have asked my sister where the guns will be, all she responds is "locked up" but is refusing to tell me how or where. Do I have a right to know where the "locked up" guns will be? How would you handle this type of situation? We are not a weapon carrying family, my kids are explorers, and weddings can get crazy with everyone being distracted (I am the matron of honor and my husband is also in the wedding). Am I being unreasonable to demand to know where exactly the guns are kept?
Anonymous wrote:They are locked up. What's the issue?
Don't let your kids "explore".
Anonymous wrote:I disagree with the people who are suggesting that you wait to confront this issue until you're there for the wedding. If you get there and your sister still refuses to give you details on the guns, or gives you details but their storage methods are inappropriate, what are you going to do? Pull out of the wedding at the last moment to watch your kids? At least if you know in advance, you can make alternative arrangements for your kids if necessary.
Anonymous wrote:I would hire a sitter and leave the kids behind. I wouldn't want my kids running around a house with guns, unsupervised. No reasonable parent would. If they were going to a gun-owning friend's house and I trusted the parents to supervise carefully (and take reasonable precautions to lock up the guns) I wouldn't have an issue with that.
Same with swimming pools. We went to a big party that was around an unfenced swimming pull. It was nerve-racking and I wouldn't take my kids to another party there; I had to watch my kids like a hawk. Not an enjoyable event at all.
Anonymous wrote:14:38 again. Maybe arrange to have your sis watch all 3 kids the first hour or so after you arrive. Give her an appreciation for how kids are into EVERY-damn-thang. Later that night when they're asleep you can have your safety discussion, and reference her afternoon of watching the kids and how hard it was.
We used this trick when we went to stay with my parents for 2 weeks with our 18 month old and they hadn't put a gate at the top of the stairs like we'd repeatedly asked. We just had them run toddler interference upstairs for a while. They had a gate up the next day.
Not sure why everyone thinks OP's situation is so unreal. that her sister would marry a texan? that a texan would have guns? that two unmarried people wouldn't be familiar with how kids are? where is the "you're making this up, this could never happen" bit?