on โ31-01-2013 04:58 PM
today i had an incident occur involving my 3 and 3 quarter year old son . its something that happens reasonably often.. and i wonder if it is rude of me to respond in the way i do.
I take him with me to the local shopping precinct in order to run some errands , and he tends to attract a bit of attention from some 'ladies' there as he is rather a cute little chap (its in his DNA ๐ thanks tone).
anyway, the first lady drops down to his level and says 'i'd like to take him home .. what a gorgeous little boy.. etc'' i say 'yes , a lot of people say that' (or something similarly bland) and the woman ignores me totally and continues to annoy him with tickles and other unwanted attention. I take his hand and walk on only for the same thing to happen again... lady talks to my son and ignores me totally. dont get me wrong, i don't want the attention of these people.. but i do get annoyed with the ignorant behaviour so i asked the 3rd person not to talk to him, and told her to 'retreat' in no uncertain terms as the boy gets tired of it himself. needless to say person No3 gets irate and calls me various things .
am i being unreasonable ? it seemed a fair number in the crowd there thought so.
on โ31-01-2013 05:16 PM
Most parents would be proud, why can't you thank them and move along? Or teach him some self protective behaviours. Most kids of that age are excellent at letting adults know when enough is enough, so I'm thinking it's more your problem than his. I'm thinking of a tshirt he could wear that would discourage the women ๐
lol At the age of 3 My brother would have bitten people to let the adults know enough was enough.
on โ31-01-2013 05:18 PM
Aren't you setting him a bad example by being rude to people who are paying him a compliment? Do you think the praise from strangers, or its rejection by his mother, would be more beneficial to his self esteem?
on โ31-01-2013 05:19 PM
LL, I think young kids also need to learn or know that they don't have to take attention from adults that they don't feel comfortable with...so personally I kind of want/ed my kids to know that and be guided by how they feel in different situations ?
on โ31-01-2013 05:20 PM
on โ31-01-2013 05:21 PM
I thought of that first :^O ๐
on โ31-01-2013 05:23 PM
I might notice a young child and say "Oh, what a lovely smile" or something. The parent smiles back and I move on. I'm shopping, they're shopping ... we're busy.
When my son was young, he had white blond hair and lovely blue eyes (he's still got lovely blue eyes, although the hair is a bit darker now he's 15). So, he got the attention, too ...
When we were in Malaysia, almost every woman in the street wanted to touch him, pinch his cheeks, talk to him in his stroller. It used to take ages to get anywhere :^O
Lakeland, you're a guy, right? I think older women love seeing men taking their kids shopping and doing things with them. It probably didn't happen with their fathers or their husbands. And, maybe they are a bit lonely and want a conversation. They might be a bit shy of you because you are different to their experience of men - but not scared of small children.
Dunno ... generalising here ...
on โ31-01-2013 05:23 PM
one with skull and cross bones may work ?
on โ31-01-2013 05:23 PM
on โ31-01-2013 05:24 PM
Unreasonable to expect strangers to respect boundaries? no.
However, twice already and then you let them have it....maybe a tad unreasonable. Person 3 took the brunt of it undeserved. However, person 3 should not respond like that.
There are polite ways to get people to leave children alone in public.
i didn't so much 'let her have it' as ask her to 'let go of him' as she had him by the arm. he's told me he doesn't like it very clearly and a i have to consider his wishes. thanks for the opinions ๐
on โ31-01-2013 05:26 PM