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Playground
Pettiness |
by:
Amy
Fleeman |
Recently
I took my two children to a popular new
park in the area. It's a beautiful new playground,
all wood, divided into different areas of
play for different age groups. It's wonderful
for me as well, as my children can play
at age appropriate areas and I can see/interact
with both of them at the same time. This
is what makes it our entire family's favorite
playground, a well that for many other families
in the area.
When we arrived at the park this particular
day, there was only one other family there.
It was extremely hot, and I told my kids
we'd only be able to stay for a small amount
of time. I wanted them to wear themselves
out a bit, but not pass out. I assumed my
normal location on a wooden bench and settled
down, knowing that I would be able to see
and hear whatever my children were doing.
It didn't take long before I noticed a problem.
There's this really neat seat swing that
my daughter (4) loves to swing in. She had
taken up a position standing by the swing,
waiting for it's occupants to finish. After
10 minutes, I saw her run past me saying
"no, leave me alone, I don't want to play"
to a smaller child who was chasing her.
This smaller child belonged to the occupant
of the swing. That occupant, was her Mother.
In the Mothers lap was a infant, approximately
six to nine months old. There are infant
swings right next to the red chair swing,
but the Mother was enjoying the chair swing
with the infant in her lap. When we had
first arrived, I didn't think too much about
it. Unusual, yes. A problem, no. Until now.
Now this Mother is glaring at my daughter,
who is running away from her daughter, because
the Mother is still in the swing my daughter
is waiting for. Everytime my daughter walked
near the swing to continue to wait for her
turn, this other little girl followed her.
Her Mother was alternating her glare between
me and my daughter, so I suggested that
we play somewhere else until they were done.
My daughter said firmly "No". The Mother
turned and fixed her death stare back on
me, as if to say "what kind of parent are
you?!". I replied to my daughter "That's
fine, but you need to be nice to the other
little girl". Now she also glared at me.
I just couldn't win.
She stood there, waiting her turn for the
swing another 5 minutes before the Mother
got all huffy, grabbed her daughter by the
arm, and dragged her and the baby off to
another side of the park. Once again she
was glaring at me, keeping her eyes fixated
us as she walked away. Cursing at me I'm
sure. I apologized to her, because obviously,
she thought we'd done something wrong. She
didn't respond, kept that evil stare on
us, and continued walking.
I wanted to cry, but instead I grabbed my
daughter, told her that she shouldn't have
been so rude to the little girl (after all,
that's what little girls do, follow bigger
girls around) and put her in the swing.
I pushed her for about two minutes, called
for my son, and headed to the car. In order
to get there, we had to pass the other Mom
on the way out, so once again I apologized,
thinking naively maybe she hadn't heard
me the first time.
Again, I got the stare of death and no response.
In the car, my son wanted to know what had
happened. I wasn't even sure. "What had
we done wrong??? Why was I apologizing to
this strange, bitter Mother?" I thought
to myself.
Then the answer came to me. Because I'm
a nice person. That's it, pure and simple.
I don't like seeing other people upset.
So, I told my son (and daughter) that what
the other Mother had done was wrong. Instead
of asking my daughter if she'd like a turn,
or even addressing her with a simple "I'm
not done yet sweetie, it's going to be awhile"
she just kept swinging. Ignoring her, as
if she didn't exist. She put her needs in
front of not only her other childs, but
she broke the cardinal rule of Motherhood;
she turned her back on another child. You
just don't do that.
I personally don't feel she should have
been on the swing at all. That as soon as
we arrived and my daughter walked over,
she should have offered to get up. However,
just because that's what I would have done,
doesn't mean that's how everyone should
feel or act. That said, I won't budge in
my belief that she was acting childishly,
not only because she didn't address my daughter
in some kind of friendly manner (after 20
minutes of waiting), but by the glaring
and pouting she kept carrying on with. Shame
on her.
A couple of days later, I wished I had done
things differently. I wished I had approached
the Mom and asked if we could have a turn
on the swing. I wish I hadn't apologized
for something that I don't feel was our
fault. But most of all, I wish I'd never
met her and her bitterness.
The moral of this story is, don't expect
a parent to do the right thing, they can
be just as selfish as children. Maybe even
more so.
About the author:
Amy Fleeman is a married Mother of two and
a loyal but overzealous beagle. Amy is the
co-owner of http://www.RaisingOurKids.comand
enjoys sharing her opinions and life experiences
with the site visitors and newsletter readers.
To hear more crazy stories and strong opinions,
(along with rational parenting advice and
some freebies) subscribe to RaisingOurKids
Newsletter here: http://go.netatlantic.com:8080/cgi-bin/lyris.pl?join=raisingourkids-news
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