Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is nuts. The woman was right, kids shouldn't be on phones. As part of your job of teaching your 7 year old to manage her D, you and she need to learn how to advocate: "I'm checking my blood because I have T1, diabetes."
Getting upset or aggressive in response to ignorant questions isn't good advocacy. It takes a village - that includes strangers at playgrounds and includes you.
Whether she was right or not about kids being on phones, it was none of her damned business. It was not her child so she didn't have any right to say anything to that child about it.
98% of 7 year olds on their phones at playgrounds are not diabetic or deaf. They should get off their phones. Their parents aren't going to tell them, so it's up to kind strangers to do it.
Strangers aren’t permitted to speak to my child.
Good luck with trying to control that which you have little control over.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My response would be we don’t have any screen limits. To each their own .
You’re right. It doesn’t matter why my DD had her phone. It’s not this lady’s business regardless.
I think I was so quick to defend because I always feel like I’m a member of the Bad Moms Club. Having a chronically ill child has done a number on my confidence.
OP, you have to practice some comebacks in which you don’t give up any personal information (or your kid’s personal info).
In this case you could have said “Thanks for sharing.” Cold. Shuts her down. Not nasty—if it doesn’t come naturally to you, it won’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My response would be we don’t have any screen limits. To each their own .
You’re right. It doesn’t matter why my DD had her phone. It’s not this lady’s business regardless.
I think I was so quick to defend because I always feel like I’m a member of the Bad Moms Club. Having a chronically ill child has done a number on my confidence.
Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry this happened, this makes me rage for you…and I can totally relate to just kind of freezing out of shock in the moment, then later kicking myself for not having said something. Eff that woman. The good news is you now have time to practice what you want to say the next time something like that happens and some miserable old cow sticks her nose where it doesn’t belong
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, that woman is a miserable person.
Your response was fine. Someone like that is not likely to be embarrassed or back down even when faced with cold, hard evidence that they've just acted like an idiot. But, if you wanted to, it would have also been fine to tell her off.
Be honest with your daughter. Tell her that some people are miserable, unkind, and not very bright. Also, let her know that sometimes older people get confused. It is fine to tell your daughter these things loudly and within earshot of whoever makes comments to her.
All of these fierce warriors!
This is neither what you would do IRL nor what you should do.
OP's response was fine. She'll be better prepared if anything like it happens again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, that woman is a miserable person.
Your response was fine. Someone like that is not likely to be embarrassed or back down even when faced with cold, hard evidence that they've just acted like an idiot. But, if you wanted to, it would have also been fine to tell her off.
Be honest with your daughter. Tell her that some people are miserable, unkind, and not very bright. Also, let her know that sometimes older people get confused. It is fine to tell your daughter these things loudly and within earshot of whoever makes comments to her.
All of these fierce warriors!
This is neither what you would do IRL nor what you should do.
OP's response was fine. She'll be better prepared if anything like it happens again.
Anonymous wrote:OP, that woman is a miserable person.
Your response was fine. Someone like that is not likely to be embarrassed or back down even when faced with cold, hard evidence that they've just acted like an idiot. But, if you wanted to, it would have also been fine to tell her off.
Be honest with your daughter. Tell her that some people are miserable, unkind, and not very bright. Also, let her know that sometimes older people get confused. It is fine to tell your daughter these things loudly and within earshot of whoever makes comments to her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is nuts. The woman was right, kids shouldn't be on phones. As part of your job of teaching your 7 year old to manage her D, you and she need to learn how to advocate: "I'm checking my blood because I have T1, diabetes."
Getting upset or aggressive in response to ignorant questions isn't good advocacy. It takes a village - that includes strangers at playgrounds and includes you.
Whether she was right or not about kids being on phones, it was none of her damned business. It was not her child so she didn't have any right to say anything to that child about it.
98% of 7 year olds on their phones at playgrounds are not diabetic or deaf. They should get off their phones. Their parents aren't going to tell them, so it's up to kind strangers to do it.
Strangers aren’t permitted to speak to my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is nuts. The woman was right, kids shouldn't be on phones. As part of your job of teaching your 7 year old to manage her D, you and she need to learn how to advocate: "I'm checking my blood because I have T1, diabetes."
Getting upset or aggressive in response to ignorant questions isn't good advocacy. It takes a village - that includes strangers at playgrounds and includes you.
Whether she was right or not about kids being on phones, it was none of her damned business. It was not her child so she didn't have any right to say anything to that child about it.
98% of 7 year olds on their phones at playgrounds are not diabetic or deaf. They should get off their phones. Their parents aren't going to tell them, so it's up to kind strangers to do it.
Strangers aren’t permitted to speak to my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is nuts. The woman was right, kids shouldn't be on phones. As part of your job of teaching your 7 year old to manage her D, you and she need to learn how to advocate: "I'm checking my blood because I have T1, diabetes."
Getting upset or aggressive in response to ignorant questions isn't good advocacy. It takes a village - that includes strangers at playgrounds and includes you.
Whether she was right or not about kids being on phones, it was none of her damned business. It was not her child so she didn't have any right to say anything to that child about it.
98% of 7 year olds on their phones at playgrounds are not diabetic or deaf. They should get off their phones. Their parents aren't going to tell them, so it's up to kind strangers to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Teach her to yell: that's my phone! I don't know you!
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