T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
217.1 | I think you can safely relax a little | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Wed Feb 25 1987 16:14 | 19 |
| Well I will jump in and say that yes I do think you are over reacting.
*Very* few children are abducted etc. by strangers. Most cases it
is by someone that they already knew at least a little or a relative.
Also you can make the distinction with children that it is alrightto
be friendly with strangers as long as you are present and o.k. it.
I have seen several cases of very small children reacting in a
frigthened and hostile fashion to adults in doctor's offices etc. and
I think this is both unnecessary and very sad. It is important to
balance the need to keep a child safe with helping a child have
positive feelings about himself and the world around him.
People used to comment on my children when they were babies. I would
smile and thank them for compliments and perhaps have a short chat
with them. I would also tell the kids not to talk to people when
I wasn't there. This allows them to safely smile at and be nice
to people in the store (for an example) but to be careful where
it is appropriate.
Bonnie
|
217.2 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Wed Feb 25 1987 18:42 | 24 |
| No, I DO NOT think you are being overprotective. If only
one child is abducted by a stranger-and if that child hap-
pens to be yours-then you perhaps were not protective e-
nough.
I watch my son like a hawk. Now that he's 7 years old, he
feels he is too old to use the women's restroom. So he
goes to the men's room alone-with mom lurking by the door
outside.
And I make sure that he reads books and articles and comics
aimed at educating children about dangerous situations, and
how to react. We discuss these things also.
We've gone over the routine should there ever be a fire in
the house. It makes just as much sense to warn him of pos-
sible dangers from strangers.
He's a very sociable little guy, so he seems to realize that
not every person represents a threat. But, should he ever be
in a dangerous situation, I hope my caution will save his life.
He's much too precious for me to risk losing.
|
217.3 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Feb 26 1987 08:33 | 12 |
| I'm with Bonnie. I taught my kids that they mustn't be made to go
*anywhere* with *any* adult apart from members of a small, well-defined
list [teacher, principal, the parents of their friends up the street,
uniformed city cop (and they knew the difference between a real one and
a rent-a-cop) etc], but that otherwise they needn't worry.
I don't know whether it was inspired advice on my part or we were
all just lucky but they all three grew up with no unusual fear and
no trauma.
=maggie
|
217.5 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Feb 26 1987 10:18 | 31 |
| Re: .4
Or, borrowing from a sign I've seen at cat shows:
Do you believe in an afterlife?
Touch my kid and find out!
Seriously, I recall a couple of situations that made me very
nervous. When Tommy was maybe six to nine months old, a woman
with a baby girl approached us and asked if she could hold Tommy
for a moment, handing me her daughter. I nervously agreed, though
I think I would not do so today. After a minute, we re-exchanged
kids and went on our way.
Just last weekend, Tom (now 3) and I were in a mall, and he was
skipping ahead of me by about 30 feet. I could see him clearly,
so that was ok. He passed by a maintenance worker who called out
to Tom and motioned for him to come over. Tom stopped, looked at
me, and did not move. I quickly collected Tom and moved on, praising
him for not going to strangers. The worker probably thought he
was being friendly, but I felt like (but did not) warning him that
such actions look very bad to parents.
In a way, it's a shame. I believe that, in a sense, children belong
to all of us. I don't hesitate to admire children, or talk to them
when their parents are nearby, but I NEVER touch them, or offer
them anything. I just think how I would feel in a similar situation.
Tommy is the only child I have - if I lost him, by any cause, I
don't think I could cope. Thus I'm very cautious and aware of what
he's doing at all times.
Steve
|
217.7 | touch your kid? no way! | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Thu Feb 26 1987 10:45 | 9 |
| re "touch my kid and you die" attitude:
This kind of attitude reinforces the "brat-hating" attitude I often
find in myself (and much worse in a large segment of society) as in the
comeback "S'okay, Lady, you couldn't *pay* me enough to touch your
smelly brat! How presumptuous of you to think I'd be interested
in your little slug!" :-)
-Ellen
|
217.9 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Thu Feb 26 1987 12:56 | 51 |
|
The following response was written by a member of our community
who wishes to remain anonymous at this time.
=maggie
==============================================================
A few years ago when my youngest daughter was about 11 she received an
obscene phone call shortly after she had gotten home from school and
was alone in the house. (I am a single parent and was at work). Now I
had educated both my daughters about obscene phone calls and strangers
coming to the door when they are home alone, etc. But this one in
particular really scared her because the man told her that he "had" me
and if she didn't want her mother to be hurt she would do what he said.
I won't go into details about what else he said to her and asked her to
do but I think as adults you can all imagine. She was terrified but
finally got off the phone by not replying to anything else that he
said. (Guess he got bored when he didn't get a response out of her!)
Then she called her friend down the street from us and had her walk
down to our house to meet her and went back to her friends house. She
didn't know where this "creep" was that had called but was too scared
to stay in our house alone. They called her friends mother and told
her a little of what happened. The mother called me at work and I went
home immediately. My daughter would not even talk about the call with
ME! That surprised me as we are very close, but she was terribly
embarassed. She DID talk with her older sister tho, who in turn drew
me into the conversation and we talked it all out. We also went to the
police station to file a report. And they told us they had had a
series of reports of such calls.
The part that bothered me, tho, was that my daughter thought she
recognized the man's voice. He is an acquaintance of mine who is
married and who my daughter had baby-sat for before. (He also works
for DEC!) But we were never able to prove who it was, so I will not
make any accusations. However, I don't allow her to baby-sit for this
person any more! He asked her to baby-sit shortly after that incidence
and it was all I could do to keep my cool but I had no proof he had
done anything wrong. However, there was no way that I would ever let
her baby-sit for him again! He had always driven her home in the past
and I didn't want him to be alone with her! I know him to be very
outspoken and could easily believe he could make obscene phone calls,
but found it hard to believe he could include threats about me!
However, as I said, I have no proof it was him, but it was someone who
knew all our names and knew that I wasn't at home.
The incidence bothered my daughter for several months after that but as
time went by she was more and more able to talk about it and I feel she
is "over it" now, but I wonder just how that will color her
relationships with men and dating in the future!
|
217.10 | Hardcore fear | MANTIS::PARE | | Thu Feb 26 1987 13:07 | 10 |
| I agree with Kerry. Children, especially little children, are far
too vulnerable and need all the protection they can get. My boys
were taught from a very early age that if they were ever in a
situation that they felt they couldn't handle they were to call
me immediately or insist that I be called. Being a single parent
is frightening. Kids have to be taught to be "street smart" today.
Most adults would freak at being touched by a stranger in a public
place. Why would we ever permit a stranger to touch our children?
Any situation that we allow is a learning experience for our child.
Is that what we want them to learn?
|
217.12 | Teach Your Children Well | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Thu Feb 26 1987 20:44 | 52 |
|
Our 6yr old has a drill we run through every time we go
out to a mall, park, fairground, etc.
Dad/Mom: Who do you talk to?
Geoffrey: No one
Dad/Mom: What if some one calls you over?
Geoffrey: Ignore them.
Dad/Mom: If they come toward you?
Geoffrey: Walk away. Run if they go fast.
Dad/Mom: If they grab or touch you?
Geoffrey: Scream like HELL! (Only time we allow him to curse)
Dad/Mom: How do you get help?
Geoffrey: Use a phone. Dial 0 for operator. Call home
if I can (he knows the number & address).
Paranoid? You bet. We have two healthy children who have
good personalities, good looks, & wonderful spirits, and
no one is going to spoil that without a fight. Geoffrey
has developed street smarts & we talk about "strangers"
and "dangers" when we're out. Elizabeth (1yr) will get
the same training at the right age. Our children will not
be ignorant of the dangers, even if that means they're
suspicious of most people at first.
My dad was abused as a boy by a neighbor. He was 8, but had
no idea what was happening. He couldn't talk to anyone. I was
lucky enough (dorky enough?) to be passed over. My children
know the facts, the procedure, & the most important part in all
this: that they can tell us anything, & that we'll love them
no matter what happens, that it is not their fault, and that
they always do their best in our eyes.
Two years ago a molester roamed the neighborhood. Geoffrey wanted
to know why he should be afraid. We had one of those long talks.
There he was, cuddled up with his blanket & bear, & there I was
explaining that molesters wanted to touch or hurt children. After
I tucked him in, I went out in the living room & cried. And what
is in store for our daughter?
Indeed: touch my children & you will die. And if that makes you
hate children all the better. Stay away from us, & we'll oblidge
you in like fashion.
|
217.13 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Fri Feb 27 1987 12:06 | 18 |
|
Paranoid? no: paranoia implies that the behaviour is in some sense
irrational or non-sane.
However I do find this degree of fear unfortunate. Because of the behaviour
of (presumably) a minute minority of the population, the rest of us
have to modify our behaviour, and suppress behaviour patterns that are
totally innocuous in intent.
Example: I was once lost in a strange neighbourhood. I pulled up alongside
some children (the only humans in sight) to ask directions, and before
I could even wind down the window to ask they had run off screaming
to their houses. Fortunately I found a policeman to give me directions
soon afterwards.
/. Ian .\
|
217.14 | paranoia is hereditary | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Fri Feb 27 1987 12:09 | 13 |
| re -1:
>"stay away from us, & we'll oblige you in like fashion."
Does that mean you'll keep your screaming brats out of every restaurant,
museum, park, concert, or show at which I happen to be? Off the
streets, out of my yard, and out of earshot? And even when they get
to be teenagers? That's great!
Leave you alone and you'll leave me alone, huh? I am very glad that
most parents are not as paranoid as you are. I would never have
children to greet, talk to, or laugh with.
-Ellen
|
217.15 | | ESPN::HENDRICKS | Holly | Fri Feb 27 1987 15:31 | 16 |
| re .12
I appreciate your concern for their safety, but at the same time
I shudder to think that if I were in the grocery line behind you,
and made eye contact with one of the children, and said a few words
to them, or put out a hand to steady a child who stood up in the
carriage while the parent was busy writing a check, you would deck
me one.
I usually assume that parents will not mind friendly and respectful
interactions with their children in a waiting-type situation IF
the parents are right near by and able to monitor the situation.
As a former teacher, it comes totally naturally for me.
But maybe for my own safety, I should adopt a stony stare. How
sad...
|
217.16 | All things in moderation | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Feb 27 1987 15:41 | 15 |
| I frequently talk to children while waiting in lines, especially
if their parent is nearby and even more so if I have my own son
along. I have never yet encountered a situation where the parent
took offense. As long as one keeps one's distance and doesn't
say things the parent might find annoying, everyone seems to
enjoy it.
A side note - though this note is in WOMANNOTES, it, like many other
recent entries, is not really specific to females. This could
have been started in PARENTING, or HUMAN_RELATIONS. I suppose that
as a moderator of HUMAN_RELATIONS, I like to see topics brought
up in that conference when reasonable. (Files are SABRE::PARENTING
and QUARK::HUMAN_RELATIONS, FYI.)
Steve
|
217.17 | | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Fri Feb 27 1987 16:27 | 11 |
|
re. 13, 15, 16
If I'm alongside I have no problem with anyone talking with
our children. Our 6yr old doesn't always cling to us, so the
instructions are for him when he is by himself or accidentally
separated from us.
re. 14 I got the idea in your earlier note. God forbid
I should ever run into you with or without my children...
|
217.18 | Why I asked? | NETMAN::MORIN | TRAVELIN MAN | Fri Feb 27 1987 17:18 | 13 |
| The reason why I entered this note is because I wanted opinions
from women other than my wife's. I apologize if I have antagonized
you. Since a lot of women are mothers I thought this was the place
to asked the question. I am glad to see that there are others who
think this is an issue too.
Also I think some of you got the wrong idea. I am all for normal
interaction. And I think my kids may do it better than I do. But
I think there are limits to what a parent will take from a total
stranger.
|
217.19 | talking vs touching | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Fri Feb 27 1987 22:17 | 23 |
| I think it is prefectly appropriate to bring this topic up
here. It might be worth while to post it in parenting also
and see what diferent sorts of answers might be given.
I think I would make a clear distinction between allowing little
children to talk to people in a waiting type situation (store,
doctor's office) where a parent is present and allowing strangers
to touch kids, or talk to them when parents aren't around.
We can keep our children safe with out making them paranoid
and afraid.
Touching was to me a particularly sore subject when my 14 year old
was little because so many people would pat his nappy hair. We
taught him just to ask people please not to do that, and say he didn't
like it!
Right now we still have to deal with our twelve year old "special"
son who is friendly with everyone. It is much harder to teach safety
rules to a child whose ability to understand is diminished. He never
goes anywhere without someone watching over him.
Bonnie
|
217.20 | | MTV::HENDRICKS | Holly | Sat Feb 28 1987 07:03 | 5 |
| re .17
thanks for clarifying...I am fully in support of your position,
as I understand it now, and will no longer worry about my safety
if I make contact with children in the checkout line or dentist's office!
|
217.21 | re .8, meant to add this earlier | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Sat Feb 28 1987 21:49 | 8 |
| Kerry,
It is no mystery why babies and small children love you.
They can't resist the grin surrounded by that beard. You
simply have a face that charms children.
Bonnie
|
217.22 | You Can't be TOO Careful | MAPLE::BRAKE | | Mon Mar 02 1987 08:13 | 38 |
| There is absolutely NO way a parent can be TOO careful with their
children. Yes, it is a sad commentary on our society but it is true.
Allow me to relate a story that really happened which woke me up.
There is a children's clothing store in Foxboro on Route 140 with
great prices and huge crowds. Normally while shopping there I have
concentrated on sizes, colors, etc while keeping my children in
sight by calling their name every couple of minutes and then making
eye contact.
Suddenly a woman started screaming a girl's name and began running
around frantically. Her child was not around. She found the security
officer and explained that her daughter was 3 and had been playing
uder the coat rack and she (the mother) saw her just 1 minute prior
to noticing she (the daughter) was missing. The security guard
locked the doo to the store and made an announcement about the child
over the loudspeaker. After about a 1/2 hour, the guard was hauling
off a guy and a scared looking kid went running and crying for it's
mother.
I say "IT" because what this guy had done was lure the girl out
from under the coat rack, brought her into a changing room, put
boys' clothes on her and....cut her hair really short!
The point is that there are many, many well-meaning adults/parents
out there who mean no harm in complementing other children. But
the above episode illustrated for me quite clearly that for every
thousand good people there is a quack who would stoop to any depths
to abduct or harm a child.
I will, therefore, harness my children when in stores, give dirty
looks to anyone who approaches my children, and confront any physical
attempt with whatever means I can muster. I agree that this may
be overreacting but my children are too dear to me to risk any degree
of trust anymore.
Rich
|
217.23 | | FAUXPA::ENO | Bright Eyes | Mon Mar 02 1987 09:05 | 5 |
| Parents DO have to be more careful of their children out in public
than they did twenty years ago, and one reason why (in my opinion)
is that twenty years ago, the huge crowded shopping malls did not
exist and opporunities/occasions to bring small children into such
public areas were not as available.
|
217.24 | similarities drawn | ULTRA::GUGEL | Simplicity is Elegance | Mon Mar 02 1987 09:07 | 5 |
| Sounds to me like parents need to be "fearful" of their kids in
the same way that women are "fearful" of themselves. It's very
similar, right?
-Ellen
|
217.25 | Wondering.... | YAZOO::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Mon Mar 02 1987 09:15 | 12 |
| There are three books that describe what are called "urban legends",
two of the titles are "The Choking Doberman" and "The Mexican Pet".
The books are a collection of stories that seem to be universally
told - some of which can be traced back to the 12th century. One
thing that they all have in common is that when they are researched
they can never be actually proven to have happened. (The choking
doberman for example involves a family who rushes their choking
dog to the vet only to find human finger(s) in his throat - on
returning home they find a burglar cowering in a closet missing
finger(s).) I would be more comfortable with accepting .22's
story if it were not an exact duplicate of one of those urban
legends.
|
217.26 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Mar 02 1987 10:17 | 18 |
| Re: .22, .25
Yes, I've heard that "urban legend" too - at least three times,
each one about a different store.
There is just too much hysteria around on the issue of protecting
our children. A major New England dairy, HP Hood, has recently
announced that it will stop printing pictures of missing children
on its milk cartons, because in the six years they've been doing
it, not ONE child was found due to the pictures. We're scaring
our children and making parents just a bit too paranoid -
fingerprinting our children? Ridiculous!
It's very easy to take sensible precautions and to teach our children
to be "street smart" - at least the hysteria has taught us this
much. But too much fear is damaging - to the child and the parents.
Steve
|
217.27 | from a non-parent | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | | Mon Mar 02 1987 11:37 | 9 |
| I think some parents are scaring their children more than necessary.
They use the "you're going to get stolen" line as a way of controlling
their kids. I've seen the same scene play itself out over and over
-- the parent is making unreasonable demands on the child, the child
reacts, the parent threatens the child with disappearance, and the
child breaks down in tears. It seems horribly cruel and needless.
There must be a balance between alerting children to potential dangers
and making the child too scared to function or think. (That doesn't
mean that the balance is easy to find!)
|
217.28 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Mon Mar 02 1987 12:06 | 24 |
|
We may need to be more protective of our offspring today than 20 years
ago, but are we actually being so?
I personally doubt it: when I was a child I was restrained by a set
of reins until I was old enough not to stray - nobody would have gotten
me to stray from my Mother or Nanny by any sort of words because I was
held firmly by leather cords.
When I was older I was expected to hold hands and never let go until
I went off to boarding school and was expected to show adult behaviour
patterns.
And yet today I see toddlers crawling rampantly around stores and 5-6
year olds running freely about.
In fact the only time they seem to be under even modest control is when
they are in a cart at a supermarket.
Is it not possible that we are replacing physical control, discipline
and respect for parents that protected me and my peers, with a state
of fear instilled in the child?
/. Ian .\
|
217.29 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Mon Mar 02 1987 12:58 | 31 |
| Now that I've entered .2, I thought of even more to
say.
First, one of the things we taught our son at a very
early age was, if he is EVER seperated from me in a
store, he is to go directly to the nearest counter or
guard, and have me paged. Several months ago we lost
contact with each other very briefly, in a shopping
mall. I found him at a nearby counter asking the se-
curity guard to please call his mother. He received
a big hug and lot of praise from his mom! (Unfortunately,
he also used this tactic to gain my attention one day
when he felt "ignored"...I went down the next aisle and
the next thing I knew, I was being paged. Apparently he
felt that I should be listening to him, and "conveniently"
"lost" me...oh well, that time he got a lecture about the
little boy who cried wolf.)
Jamey is a VERY sociable kid. I believe in balance; at a
very early age (2 or less) he was given a rather sizeable
allowance each week. He is allowed to spend it on anything
he wants. So, I no longer have to listen to him whine about
wanting this or that or the other thing. It's simple. It's
his money. When it's all gone, that's it for the week. And,
he handles his own money, so he has learned to deal with sales
clerks, to count his own change, etc. He KNOWS that not every
stranger is a hazard to hs health. He has developed poise and
social skills in the process. It's all a matter of good judge-
ment.
|
217.30 | analogous situation | DINER::SHUBIN | Go ahead - make my lunch! | Mon Mar 02 1987 18:17 | 17 |
| re: .15 (Holly)
I usually assume that parents will not mind friendly and respectful
interactions with their children in a waiting-type situation IF
the parents are right near by and able to monitor the situation.
As a former teacher, it comes totally naturally for me.
But maybe for my own safety, I should adopt a stony stare. How
sad...
I had very similar thoughts this morning when I read some replies to the
note about men jogging/walking past women who are alone. I recognize the
problem, and believe that it's real (hell, *I* worry about meeting up with
strange men, and I'm one myself!). It's just another sorry commentary
on life in the latter half of the 20th century.
-- hal
|
217.31 | Some strange people are not strangers. | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Tue Mar 03 1987 15:11 | 13 |
|
Much of the research on the sexual and physical abuse of children
tends to indicate that, statistically, children have more reason
to fear family members than strangers.
|