Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you are raising some seriously entitled children. I would be pissed at my kid if she thought she could use the neighbor's yard as her personal sidewalk.
+1. Even cutting the corner across someone's lawn would get you yelled at by someone's mother or grandmother in my neighborhood growing up. It's totally disrespectful and classless. Kids raised right don't do it.
Anonymous wrote:When my kids were little, the bus stop was right in front of our house. On rainy or snowy days, I would often have ten + kids on my front porch staying dry and waiting for the bus. I kinda loved it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some of you are raising some seriously entitled children. I would be pissed at my kid if she thought she could use the neighbor's yard as her personal sidewalk.
+1. Even cutting the corner across someone's lawn would get you yelled at by someone's mother or grandmother in my neighborhood growing up. It's totally disrespectful and classless. Kids raised right don't do it.
Anonymous wrote:Some of you are raising some seriously entitled children. I would be pissed at my kid if she thought she could use the neighbor's yard as her personal sidewalk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do want to be "neighborly" but quite frankly this is a one-way situation where they get all of the benefit and I get all of the wear and tear and potential risk. I literally NEVER cross into their yards and as I mentioned the one family got annoyed when my kids and some friends stepped over onto their property at one point last year.
If their kids want to come on our property to play with my kids or cross occasionally when they are running late or there is bad weather, that's totally fine, but crossing through my yard at least twice per day every single day...at least 4 pairs of feet? That's gonna leave a mark.
OP what is this really about. You don't like the family so you want an excuse to chase them off your property with a hose?
I don't need an "excuse" to not want people trespassing in my yard. One of the families I DO like (although I don't want their kids in my yard EVERY DAMN DAY) and the other I barely know but they have been less than neighborly to us so I'm not sure why I should put myself at risk to make their lives a little easier.
Anonymous wrote:They're not going to fall or get hurt walking through your yard. The chances of a serious injury from walking are slim to none. I would bet if kids walked through your yard for 10 years, you'd see zero injuries.
Honest question: Why do you care about wear and tear on your yard?
It seems like you are either really anxious or you're looking for trouble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do want to be "neighborly" but quite frankly this is a one-way situation where they get all of the benefit and I get all of the wear and tear and potential risk. I literally NEVER cross into their yards and as I mentioned the one family got annoyed when my kids and some friends stepped over onto their property at one point last year.
If their kids want to come on our property to play with my kids or cross occasionally when they are running late or there is bad weather, that's totally fine, but crossing through my yard at least twice per day every single day...at least 4 pairs of feet? That's gonna leave a mark.
I get that it's annoying, but it's so clear from your posts it annoys you because of the interpersonal dynamics and NOT becuase of the (nonexistent) risks. So own that. You don't seem sympathetic because you have all these excuses about mud and "marks" on the grass. Your resentment isn't really about the kids.
Actually, it's both. I don't want people using my yard as a cut through every single day, even if we are super close friends. But this situation is worse because half of the people who are abusing my hospitality wouldn't allow the same in reverse.
OH good lord. Be an adult and either talk to them or put up a fence. At this point you're acting so pathetic it's laughable. You're the idiot that just constantly complains about things but never does anything to change the situation.
I was actually ASKING whether people thought I should set a boundary of the number of days they can use the path or something. I have every intention of speaking with them about this. What made you think I wouldn't??? I'm just trying to figure out what to say, what I'm ultimately comfortable with, etc.
Anonymous wrote:our neighbors left a gap in the fence when they fenced in their yard -- so the middle schoolers could continue to use the cut through. So very cool of them.