Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Here’s a crazy idea:
If you go to the baby pool, you should expect babies to be there. And here’s the really crazy part - you should expect babies to act like babies and toddlers to act like toddlers. If you don’t want them playing with your phone, don’t put it where the pool toys are kept.
An even crazier idea:
Parents take responsibility for their baby and toddler. Parents learn to actively supervise, watch and parent their baby and toddler. If you don’t want to parent your child, stay home.
+1
I know it’s hard to be a parent but you signed up for this, cupcake. Pay up for your lack of supervision. Maybe take a parenting class?
I hate to break it to you, but you have to grow up at some point. Really. Now you want toddlers in a toddler pool to help you keep your stuff safe? That’s what your life has come to? You’re that entitled?
I understand that being an adult is super hard for you, but what’s next? Are you going to lay next to the pool and demand payment if a kid splashes water and your blowout is ruined?
l
So to be clear, you are calling someone entitled who is saying you need to parent your child? You are liking a toddler throwing a phone (bc their parent wasn’t watching them) into the pool to getting splashed at a pool? You are fine with your child taking things that don’t belong to them and destroying them bc it’s where they could possibly get it. And to add to that, when your child does destroy someone else’s property it’s not your child’s fault. Seriously, you are calling someone else entitled?!
So you are saying it is 100% parental accountability and 0% personal accountability?
If that’s what you took from the post, then that’s what you took from the post.
I guess that is what I took from the post.
It is the same that my 10 yr old thought too - he attributed it 100% to the parents. I however feel like if he leaves his cello bow in a dangerous - dog reachable- spot like on the floor or on the coffee table, then it would be his fault if the dog chews on the bow. If he left it on the dining room table, I would blame the dog. I feel like the location of the phone is the key here. Right next to a baby pool... I mean, come on. So I am 100% on personal responsibility.
It is such an interesting discussion though. I can see why it made it so many pages. Ha ha.