Anonymous wrote:So if I bring an apple for my kid as a snack, am I supposed to share with you because your kid is distracted and wants one?
Haha NOPE!! Youre crazy op.
Anonymous wrote:Of course they can bring their own toy. No, they don't have to share while they are actively playing with it. No one ever has to share (whether they are playing with it or not)...but offering turns is always nice and appreciated. To little kids, babies are annoying and can ruin games because they want to grab everything and 'get in the way'. The father was there to play with his kid, not yours. That's just kind of how it goes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When my toddler brings toys to the playground I make her share (if other children are interested). If she doesn't, toy goes away. It's a public space where you know other children will be -- think sharing is common courtesy (not that I'd show up with a frisbee at a toddler playground...sounds like a lawsuit waiting to happen...haha)
No one should have to share a frisbee with an 18 month old. I'd question how much an 18m old can actually get out of a playground in the best of circumstances. But either way, public space does not mandate sharing.
Anonymous wrote:When my toddler brings toys to the playground I make her share (if other children are interested). If she doesn't, toy goes away. It's a public space where you know other children will be -- think sharing is common courtesy (not that I'd show up with a frisbee at a toddler playground...sounds like a lawsuit waiting to happen...haha)
Anonymous wrote:A similar thing happened to us. Except it was an older kid playing with his father and a soccer ball at a 2-5 playground. My twins kept chasing the ball, we kept correcting them, the older kid, maybe ten, refused to let them even touch it. We were constantly saying no, that is his ball, he does not have to share. It was so annoying, I almost picked up the ball and threw it to the adjacent older kid playground where he should have been. We ended up leaving early. Some people are jerks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't think I've ever seen a sign at any toddler playground prohibiting the presence of outside toys or playthings.
Perhaps it's a simple matter of the general public not properly adhering to this "rule" because there isn't one.
You know what...
This is your moment OP.
This is your chance to make a difference in the world.
I encourage you to start a grassroots campaign to Keep Toddler Playgrounds Free From Distraction By Other Kids Things and just start putting up signs everywhere and you can start standing outside libraries to gather signatures to try and initiate some legislature making it a crime punishable by a fine and possibly community service to bring (GASP!!!) a "frisbee thing" to a public playground...
The horror
You can do it OP we're all behind you!!
You think you're witty but you are not.
Anonymous wrote:Be sure and tell us all the juicy details of how you got your ass-whupped when you tried to tell someone that they can't bring personal stuff to the playground OP...