Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm less concerned about mom with newborn, 2 and 3 year old than I am about OP and a few uptight pp's. And you're mothers, ick! Your kids must be precious.
We wish! No, we just had the decency to remove them from quiet situations when they couldn’t be quiet themselves.
A waiting room isn't a church service or a library. It's not a "quiet situation".
Anonymous wrote:Honestly, I find it oddest that there were (multiple)? parents working on laptops during a kids dance class.
Anonymous wrote:It's only rude if the noise was disturbing the class. Although the waiting room was quiet, there's no rule (said or unsaid) that it had to be quiet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm less concerned about mom with newborn, 2 and 3 year old than I am about OP and a few uptight pp's. And you're mothers, ick! Your kids must be precious.
We wish! No, we just had the decency to remove them from quiet situations when they couldn’t be quiet themselves.
Anonymous wrote:I'm less concerned about mom with newborn, 2 and 3 year old than I am about OP and a few uptight pp's. And you're mothers, ick! Your kids must be precious.
Anonymous wrote:As a mom of 3 young ones myself, I am more than aware of how annoying my kids can be in public. Moms of littles are usually not oblivious to the ruckus our kids may cause. I always feel bad when my kids are disturbing the environment or others. I try very hard to prevent that (being prepared w/snacks, activities, having talks with them before we get wherever we're going, etc), but sometimes, toddlers and babies just don't cooperate. It's the nature of their age.
However, like a PP mentioned, perhaps she didn't have any choice but to bring them. I've been there. My husband is quite ill right now with a pretty serious illness, making it near impossible to leave my kids with others unless I'm paying them (which sometimes I do). Just doing average day-to-day things can be that much more challenging, so often times, there's no choice but to cart everyone around just to get the basics done. Maybe ask if she could use a hand, perhaps offer a snack if you have extras? Just a thought...I'm in that situation now and sometimes its just plain overwhelming and hard.
Anonymous wrote:It's only rude if the noise was disturbing the class. Although the waiting room was quiet, there's no rule (said or unsaid) that it had to be quiet.
Anonymous wrote:That sounds really annoying and the mom sounds completely oblivious. I would just let it go. Next time, just put on your headphones and drown out the noise with some music.
Anonymous wrote:Fine except for:
started jumping on the chairs, bouncing off of them, at one point, kicking the other child
Give the mom a break, OP. Be glad you aren't her.