Anonymous wrote:My kids I’m not bothered one bit.
But other kids, he’ll no. I don’t like other kids or adults going in there. Usually I didn’t pick up that room so it looks messy. Also, it seems like an invasion of privacy to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to ask? It's an adults bedroom. I could have a vibrator, a gun or drugs on my nightstand. I shouldn't have guest children in my bedroom. I telly kids all the time my bedroom is an adult space. They don't listen of course and like to snuggle with us but there is a big difference if I'm there. I'm being extreme but I just don't feel an adult bedroom is a place for children especially children that aren't mine.
I don't want kids in my children's bedroom let alone my own bedroom.
All of those items are negligence and us illegal moron
Anonymous wrote:All of you people defending not teaching your children about public/private space, do you think your child should take food out of the fridge on a play date without asking? Take a pen from the mom's purse? Look up something on the internet on the mom's phone which is lying there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Play date kids shouldn't be going in any bedroom.
Not only are they personal spaces, it's where we place any meds we take.
One of my friends had to end up locking her bedroom (with the small key / opening device) hidden above the door--so kids wouldn't get in and start going through drawers. And the drunk parents wouldn't get in during parties and start having sex on their bed.
Time for your friend to find new friends!
Anonymous wrote:Play date kids shouldn't be going in any bedroom.
Not only are they personal spaces, it's where we place any meds we take.
One of my friends had to end up locking her bedroom (with the small key / opening device) hidden above the door--so kids wouldn't get in and start going through drawers. And the drunk parents wouldn't get in during parties and start having sex on their bed.
. This. Out kids are always welcome.Anonymous wrote:It’s about respecting people’s privacy. My kids can come into our bedroom. But they know other kids cannot and they should never enter anyone’s master bedroom. That is not a public part of the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have to ask? It's an adults bedroom. I could have a vibrator, a gun or drugs on my nightstand. I shouldn't have guest children in my bedroom. I telly kids all the time my bedroom is an adult space. They don't listen of course and like to snuggle with us but there is a big difference if I'm there. I'm being extreme but I just don't feel an adult bedroom is a place for children especially children that aren't mine.
I don't want kids in my children's bedroom let alone my own bedroom.
All of those items are negligence and us illegal moron
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would your child need to entertain a friend in your bedroom? Explore your drawers and closests? Bathroom products? No thanks!
But OP of the other thread seemed to think it should be an obvious, bright-line rule for any child to never enter a parental bedroom, not merely that kids should go find somewhere else to play. That’s what I don’t get. My kids breeze in and out of my bedroom all the time. I wouldn’t expect them to be like “BUT WAIT NOW I HAVE A GUEST SO I CAN’T” and much less so for the guest to have been taught not to ever enter an adult’s bedroom.
Please stop mischaracterizing OP’s post. It’s clearly about kids going in there during a play date. We can easily infer that it’s when a parent isn’t there:
There is one of my daughter’s friends who always goes into the primary bedroom during play dates[i], despite us repeatedly telling her not to. Should I say something to the parents?
I personally have taught my daughters not to go in the parents’ bedrooms or other private areas of the home during a play date. [b]Am I the only one who cares about this?
I have no idea what you’re correcting. I never said the parent was in the room. My post is about what my expectations of my kids, and their guests, are during play dates.
What's so damn confusing about it? Are you also confused about why you and your kids aren't allowed into the roped of areas of the zoo or museum? Do you become upset at the employees only signs on doors?
But I’m not mischaracterizing anything. I am completely consistent with the post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would your child need to entertain a friend in your bedroom? Explore your drawers and closests? Bathroom products? No thanks!
But OP of the other thread seemed to think it should be an obvious, bright-line rule for any child to never enter a parental bedroom, not merely that kids should go find somewhere else to play. That’s what I don’t get. My kids breeze in and out of my bedroom all the time. I wouldn’t expect them to be like “BUT WAIT NOW I HAVE A GUEST SO I CAN’T” and much less so for the guest to have been taught not to ever enter an adult’s bedroom.
Well trained children should know this.
+1. My children have been raised to even ask if they can go into their grandparents’ bedroom, and guess what? The answer isn’t always “yes.” For example, my mom wraps gifts on a card table in the corner of her bedroom during the Christmas season, and my dad sometimes works on model airplanes (drying glue). And with my ILs, my FIL has some medical devices that he would rather not have them see and ask about. So the answer isn’t always “yes” even for very close family.