42 answers

Should I Correct Other Children

Let me preface this with the fact that I am quite an outspoken person and have no problem speaking to strangers (adult or child) but am not, generally, a rude person.

I have an incident that I want to get some feedback on. I was sitting in a restaurant last week having a meal with my son. It wasn't a really fancy place but not a fast food joint either. It was just a nice bistro. Anyway, a child of about 5 or 6 threw a piece of food at my son "deliberately" -- I know it was meant to hit my son because the little boy said "bullseye" afterward. So, I asked the waitress to please inform the mother of the incident. The kind waitress did and the mother whispered something to the child. I thought it was settled but then the child did it again and started laughing. I turned and asked the child to please stop. The mother snapped my head of by replying with "he's my son, you don't tell him what to do. I am not going to stiffle his creativity by putting demands on him and besides he did not hurt your son." I promptly asked my son to go to the door, I paid the bill and left but not without telling the manager about the incident.

Was I wrong in speaking to the boy? I don't think so -- not the way the mother reacted. I mean, I have seen this kind of thing happen in the movies but I have never seen this in real life before! I am pretty sure it was Thomas Jefferson who said "your freedom ends where my nose begins." So where does my parental right to protect my son begin against a child whose mother is obviously not instructing her child on how to NOT intrude in other's spaces and not teaching him to respect other people's "freedoms"?

I am not trying to be a prude here but I just can't believe there are children out there like this little boy and I am even more amazed that there are mothers like this out there. If it had been my child, I would have been mortified with the first bit of food thrown -- there would NOT be another piece thrown I can guarantee that. I taught Charm School for two years to unruly children whose parents wanted them to act better in a social setting. But I've never dealt with a parent who not only let her child act unruly but ENCOURAGED it.

Anyway, what would you have done?

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

I know you have gotten a lot of responses already, but I would also like to ad that many times, when a stranger corrects a child, the child listens better than when the parent tries to correct them. I think the stranger kind of scares them into behaving, and as with all the other mom's I don't see anything wrong with it. I'll take any help I can get as long as it is polite & constructive.

2 moms found this helpful

I would have done the same thing & told the little boy to stop it. You didn't do anything wrong in my opinion. She needs to teach him better manners. Besides, you didn't yell at him or call him names, you politely asked him to stop. You had every right.

1 mom found this helpful

Good for you!! The only thing I have a problem with is the other mother saying that about "creativity"!! What is creative about throwing stuff at people?? That's just rude!! She needs to teach him some manners. That is the only thing I would have done different is corrected her on that, I like to point out other peoples mistakes when they are trying to be all tough and they screw up, that shuts them up pretty quick. But you did the right thing in my opinion.

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

Some parents seem bound and determined to raise criminals or at the least entitled brats. You had every right to do as you did, but it probably did no good. The mom is the problem and she is the one that should have been disciplined. Instead of speaking to the child, you should have asked the waitress to speak to the manager because the child is still throwing food. I would ask the manager to either ask the mother and son to leave or be moved. I would let the manager know that if I was forced to leave because of the behavior I would not be paying for my meal. You had the right to eat peacefully in the restaurant, and it is the manager's job to enforce civil behavior in their restaurant. It's a shame the management didn't recognize what was going on and handle it proactively.

3 moms found this helpful

It makes me a little sad that you even questioned yourself in this situation. Of course you did the right thing! The only thing I might have done differently was to let the mother know if it happened again, I would get the manager. I'm sure the restaurant would not appreciate having food thrown all over; someone has to clean that up. Any decent manager would politely ask that mother and child to leave. Then you could have continued your meal in peace. The main thing is, though, that more people need to be willing to speak up. We have to stop being afraid of what others will think and just do the right thing!

2 moms found this helpful

I just had to respond to this. I am a para in a classroom for kids with EBD (emotional behavior disorder) and I deal with kids who have a hard time controlling their emotions and often act out inappropriately. THANK YOU for standing up for yourself and for your son. I believe that a lot of inappropriate behaviors are LEARNED behaviors. That little boy received positive attention that day for inappropriate behavior. Why wouldn't he do it again? Your son, however, was shown immediately that the boy's behavior was wrong and was not to be tolerated. You can't control how others are going to raise their children. You can hope, though, that the little boy got a message that day at least from you that his behavior was not okay. I can say that I certainly would not have tolerated that behavior either.

2 moms found this helpful

OMG I can't believe she actually said that to you. I would've just said "well if it doesn't stop then I'll be throwing it back at you, with ketchup on it!". lol. I would've also said "no, it's called manners, only an idiot would call food throwing 'creativity'!"
How frustrating! You did nothing wrong and I would not have been THAT patient or polite. I would've LOUDLY asked the staff if I could have another table because this LADY is encouraging her son to throw food at us and thinks it's cute.
Sorry they ruined your meal.
J.
Mom to 4, almost 5 through another adoption and hopefully more :o)

2 moms found this helpful

If the other kid was throwing the toast into outer space it would not have been your place to say something. Since it was coming directly at you and your child you had every right to speak up.

2 moms found this helpful

I know you have gotten a lot of responses already, but I would also like to ad that many times, when a stranger corrects a child, the child listens better than when the parent tries to correct them. I think the stranger kind of scares them into behaving, and as with all the other mom's I don't see anything wrong with it. I'll take any help I can get as long as it is polite & constructive.

2 moms found this helpful

It takes a village, and we forget that ALL the time! Good for you. My MO is usually to say something to the child first, model the behavior to my child and sometimes the parent. I am a teacher. I work in an expulsion lab, which basically means that I work with all the kids that get kicked out of their school--the ones that no one else wants to deal with. I am very comfortable disciplining other people's children, especially when it affects my own kids.

I would have turned around and talked to the kid directly, politely but direct. I would have skipped the waitress, but good for her for being your messenger. If they behavior occurred again, which it did, I would have stood up and addressed the parent, in front of the child, and told her what happened, and what I would like to see differently. Then, if change did not occur, I would have taken it to the restaurant, and brought over the manager. Okay, so I have never gotten to step 3, but I would.

I overstep. I know that. But usually dealing with the child directly works best and we do not have to go farther. I like to do it in front of the parent if I can, so that there is nothing underboard, but I will do it with just the child and I separately. Sometimes it makes it better when the parent is absent, so that dynamic can be bypassed, but either way.

At the Twins game the other day there were children throwing sunflower seeds. I did not see parents, so I just gave them " the look" and it seemed to stop. I turned to my son and said, "If one hits you, let me know and I will say something." Nothing happened. We went for a walk in search of snowcones. We were gone for awhile and when we got back, there were seeds in my popcorn bucket. I calmly picked them out, turned around, and threw them directly at the kids who had been throwing them. I faced forward. (Beat. Timing is everything.) I turned and made eye contact with the kids and said, "Those were in my popcorn." (Eye contact with kids, then I notice the parents. Make eye contact. Don't miss a beat.) "I really don't appreciate it." (Maintain eye contact with kids, glance at parents, turn around.) I heard the parents quietly reprimand the kids, and there was no more throwing. Of course, there was no apology either.

So, I would say again, "Good for you!" and encourage you to go further. As long as you are respectful and honest, you are doing the right thing.

2 moms found this helpful

Unfortunately, this mother is setting herself up for some trouble in the years to come. Just wait until his "creativity" infringes on her rights to have a respectable home. She'll realize she made some mistakes. Pray that her attitude does not create a little monster...

1 mom found this helpful

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