Anonymous wrote:Damn OP, your foolishness is gonna break the internet. Please tell me this was all a big joke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you agree that battling over toys is normal and generally not to be interfered with. Obviously you think hitting is not okay, and most of us agree. Yelling is not as clear-cut, and perhaps that father was picking his battles with his child as well.
You sound like you don't get to the playground very often if this was a Dear Diary moment for you.
OP here. Actually, I don't bring my toddler to the playground very often. So what you're saying is that these things happen all the time and therefore, does not warrant parental intervention? Interesting. I will remember that going forward.
Anonymous wrote:I don't let people shout at my kids. I would have said something to the 4 year old, like 'Hey, that's not nice! No shouting!" or "That's not okay!" then dealt with my own kid if the other parent just sat there. My kids know I have their backs. I do believe kids should learn to work things out, but they learn by taking the reins from their parents. If no on teaches them what it means to stick up for them, they can't do it themselves either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here. What are the playground rules? I geniunely want to know, because I can't figure out the justification for accusing a 23 MONTH OLD of "stealing" a random toy at the playground that no one else was playing with, then saying he deserved to be yelled at because he should've had the knowledge and foresight to check and make sure it was okay with the other kids??
What is WRONG with you people?
You're missing the point (and getting hysterical).
Kids do things that are developmentally appropriate. If a toddler takes a random toy from by someone's feet, that's developmentally appropriate. If a 4 year old yells "no!" at that child, that's developmentally appropriate. In the 4 year old's mind, she was saying, "these are my toys, don't take them." She didn't touch him. Touching/hitting is always grounds for parental intervention. Is that clearer?
OP here. I guess you missed the post 3 pages ago when I said that both kids were behaving developmentally appropriate. My gripe is not with the 4-year old. My gripe is with the father who did nothing to correct the 4-year old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's a tip you can use, OP. These "To the ____ who did ____ today" threads never go well. You just are starting off from a position where you look like a complainer. And you don't get a lot of sympathy when your kid hit someone on the playground.
LOl this is so true! Has one of these EVER gone OP's way?
Anonymous wrote:I tend to keep a close eye on my 2yo son, making sure he's not being "rude" to other kids by not letting them play with toys, or by trying to take toys, or yelling "no, mine!" at other kids. However, the other day at a playground, I kind of saw myself reflected in another parent. This dad was just constantly policing his two kids, age 2 and 4. He was pretty much right, but it was exhausting to listen to, and I imagine tiring for the kids to deal with. Just constant "Sally, let him go down the slide, Bobby, let her play with one of the cars, Sally, don't yell so loud..." I mean, his intentions were good, but it was overwhelming. SO, my point is, I've backed way off my own son. I could 100% see myself allowing my kid to scoop up a toy (even if he'd set it down, maybe he's still using it) and yelling "no." If it kept happening, I'd intervene. Even at his age now, I often let it play out for a minute because sometimes my son relents after one "that's MY toy."
OP, maybe the dad just wanted to see if the girl would resolve the problem on her own. Hitting requires immediate intervention. But sharing, taking turns, etc need to be learned through experience as well as parental interaction. .
Anonymous wrote:Here's a tip you can use, OP. These "To the ____ who did ____ today" threads never go well. You just are starting off from a position where you look like a complainer. And you don't get a lot of sympathy when your kid hit someone on the playground.
Anonymous wrote:So your kid stole toys and then hit and HE's the bad parent? Your kid sounds absolutely awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here. What are the playground rules? I geniunely want to know, because I can't figure out the justification for accusing a 23 MONTH OLD of "stealing" a random toy at the playground that no one else was playing with, then saying he deserved to be yelled at because he should've had the knowledge and foresight to check and make sure it was okay with the other kids??
What is WRONG with you people?
You're missing the point (and getting hysterical).
Kids do things that are developmentally appropriate. If a toddler takes a random toy from by someone's feet, that's developmentally appropriate. If a 4 year old yells "no!" at that child, that's developmentally appropriate. In the 4 year old's mind, she was saying, "these are my toys, don't take them." She didn't touch him. Touching/hitting is always grounds for parental intervention. Is that clearer?
OP here. I guess you missed the post 3 pages ago when I said that both kids were behaving developmentally appropriate. My gripe is not with the 4-year old. My gripe is with the father who did nothing to correct the 4-year old.
OMG, you aren't going to let this go, are you?
She thought the toddler took the toy from her. She yelled at him. I assume you think the father should have said "Mary, don't yell, you weren't playing with that!" Well a) maybe she was, and because he is a toddler he didn't know that or b) maybe she wasn't, and the dad wasn't micromanaging every instance of his 4 year old's existence, so he didn't know whether she was or not. What he knows is that she used words and he hit (again, normal for their ages).
Get over it.
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