Shelgeyr wrote:
Rynar wrote:
Children are not animals, and the two should never be equated.
I'm not "equating" children with animals, I'm just trying to modify the scenario to remove the element of "my child's health & safety are worth more to me than any animal"
so that I could get your thoughts on the "learning experience" presented by the "you hit someone, they might hit you back" event.And this is what I had a problem with from the very first post I made after I saw the picture.
Assuming the person filming the event is the parent or responsible adult, not a sibling causing troubleThat parent is witnessing through the lens of their video device, their child, upset and crying, sitting less than a foot from a cat who is obviously on edge and alert; face level, no less.
As I previously stated, I have no problem teaching a life lesson should my son do something that will warrant it. But, placed in the same situation, I put down the camera and intervene so this doesn't have to be a life lesson.
The cat can do damage (if it is not declawed), I don't care one bit for your handpicked videos of "more common" occurances with children and cats. Most obviously, the cats in both of those videos are declawed. Should I have been video capturing when my son was standing face to face with my cat when he lashed out a paw and caught my son under his eye with a claw?
A parent does not need to sit back and let their child learn these "Life lessons" when they are in the position to prevent it. Me, I stop my child when he is in the observed state before he lashes out at the cat. If I am too slow to prevent him from doing so, I certainly don't sit back and let the cat get his lashes in because he gets to finish the fight (Seriously, WTF Taamar).
My point is simply, be a better parent. People and their "America's Funniest Home Videos" obsession has taken too strong a hold. I actually cringe at what I see on that show fairly often. I often wonder how a parent or responsible adult can sit idly by when danger is apparent. Put down your f*cking smart phone and be a goddamn parent.
Hey, you all want to sit back and let your kids learn a hard, possibly painful lesson when you could prevent, who am I to intervene. Me, I think I'll err on the side of my child's safety and teach him the life lessons when he does something that, despite my efforts, hurts or scares him. My son has gotten close to touching a lit gas burner on the stove, but my and Oonagh's sharp yell stops him in his tracks. We have reinforced that it is hot and it will hurt. He repeats this when I open the oven to check on dinner, too. "Daddy, oven hot."
But, I guess I should have let him burn himself to properly teach the lessons as so many here seem to support.
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This must be
Thursday. I could never get the hang of Thursdays.