Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously?
Perhaps she has ADHD, or on the spectrum
And she fidgets and moves a lot.
Did she sit in your lap or kick someone in the head?
‘Oh baby careful careful your knee is in my lap’
Big smile, whisper ‘sweetie can you please move your leg?’ Big smile, thank you.
Grace and adult ass manners go a long ways
Instead you drag your tail to DCUM to complain about petty behavior.
Glad your kids are perfect, see where they got from.
Stop being defensive about your kid with SN and start being a parent. As in put the kid with SN in between the two adults that she was sitting with. That way the one saying “oh sweetie” and getting knees put on them is YOU AND GRANDMA, not complete strangers who paid for tickets to a show, not ticket to having to parent YOUR child.
I don’t have a kid with special needs, so what now?
If a knee touching you is such a trigger I don’t know what to tell you.
Sorry but sitting cross cross apple sauce like a hippy in your $200 seat while poking and prodding the guests on either side of you is very rude and obnoxious.
Get your legs and knees out of other peoples seat space and not past the arm rails. Come on.
Entitled parents and entitled kid, SN or not.
Got it the sensory shows if your kid needs three seats to do yoga in a fancy theater.
What a jerk you sound like. Get a real problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the teen was special needs.
What are you trying to say?
A person is not "needs". Speak properly about human beings.
Inbox me disability.
Like the ASD II that went down the slide two seconds after my four year and rammed her in the back, injuring her.
All the mom, wandering about, had to say was special needs, special needs. Then monitor and parent your kid MORE, not LESS. Or be more selective with where you go.
DP,
I hope your kid is ok. However, you sound like an a**. Is this your first kid? ANY kid can end up accidentally, on purpose, or whatever whopping, hitting, pushing, biting or kicking another kid.
Happens everyday in the world.
The mom you mentioned is probably doing a lot and was trying to say her kid did not intend to your hurt your previous lamb.
Get over yourself.
Anonymous wrote:I was at Kennedy Center for opening night of Moulin Rouge over the summer and the young adult woman in front of me brought a whole grocery store pie that she was eating with her bare hands. Her young adult male companion was wearing headphones and watching something on his phone. They thankfully left after intermisison. My companion and I were shocked and still laugh about it.
Anonymous wrote:We sent to a very adult-type symphony there and the adolescent girl next to my DH kneed him the whole time. The father (no mother present) looked straight forward the entire time and did nothing.
Anonymous wrote:I agree the parent should have done something but….
Everytime I read one of these threads where someone says “my 9 year old is behaving better than that teen!” I wonder if they’ve ever met teens.
8-10 year old is the sweet spot. Old enough to understand the rules, young enough to still care what adults think. Teens are a whole different kettle of fish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the teen was special needs.
What are you trying to say?
A person is not "needs". Speak properly about human beings.
Inbox me disability.
Like the ASD II that went down the slide two seconds after my four year and rammed her in the back, injuring her.
All the mom, wandering about, had to say was special needs, special needs. Then monitor and parent your kid MORE, not LESS. Or be more selective with where you go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously?
Perhaps she has ADHD, or on the spectrum
And she fidgets and moves a lot.
Did she sit in your lap or kick someone in the head?
‘Oh baby careful careful your knee is in my lap’
Big smile, whisper ‘sweetie can you please move your leg?’ Big smile, thank you.
Grace and adult ass manners go a long ways
Instead you drag your tail to DCUM to complain about petty behavior.
Glad your kids are perfect, see where they got from.
Stop being defensive about your kid with SN and start being a parent. As in put the kid with SN in between the two adults that she was sitting with. That way the one saying “oh sweetie” and getting knees put on them is YOU AND GRANDMA, not complete strangers who paid for tickets to a show, not ticket to having to parent YOUR child.
I don’t have a kid with special needs, so what now?
If a knee touching you is such a trigger I don’t know what to tell you.
Sorry but sitting cross cross apple sauce like a hippy in your $200 seat while poking and prodding the guests on either side of you is very rude and obnoxious.
Get your legs and knees out of other peoples seat space and not past the arm rails. Come on.
Entitled parents and entitled kid, SN or not.
Got it the sensory shows if your kid needs three seats to do yoga in a fancy theater.
Anonymous wrote:Invisible disability.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seriously?
Perhaps she has ADHD, or on the spectrum
And she fidgets and moves a lot.
Did she sit in your lap or kick someone in the head?
‘Oh baby careful careful your knee is in my lap’
Big smile, whisper ‘sweetie can you please move your leg?’ Big smile, thank you.
Grace and adult ass manners go a long ways
Instead you drag your tail to DCUM to complain about petty behavior.
Glad your kids are perfect, see where they got from.
Stop being defensive about your kid with SN and start being a parent. As in put the kid with SN in between the two adults that she was sitting with. That way the one saying “oh sweetie” and getting knees put on them is YOU AND GRANDMA, not complete strangers who paid for tickets to a show, not ticket to having to parent YOUR child.
I don’t have a kid with special needs, so what now?
If a knee touching you is such a trigger I don’t know what to tell you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perhaps the teen was special needs.
This would be my assumption. No matter what she looked like or how she spoke.
OK? Then a child with special needs needs to be seated in between the at least two adults accompanying them. No excuse for that not to happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for Op.When you pay $150/ticket, you expect nice mannered customers. That is annoying to sit near the loud, kicking family.
+1. And only use YOUR seat space, not other peoples’