Kid Stuck On Monorail In SHOCKING Hersheypark Video
Rethinking Parental Blame: The Overlooked Role of Natural Child Temperament in Viral Incidents
Stop immediately blaming parents when children end up in viral dangers. Discover why natural temperament often dictates behavior more than perceived parental negligence.
Short Summary
- Critically examine snap judgments made against parents in high-stakes incidents like those at amusement parks or fast-food restaurants.
- Recognize that natural child temperament is a significant, often overlooked, factor in behavior that supersedes parenting skills in specific instances. This discussion analyzes two viral incidents involving unsupervised children—one on the Hershey Park monorail and one at a Chick-fil-A—to argue against quick condemnation of the parents involved, emphasizing the role of innate personality traits.
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Top Comments (10)
I learned our then 3 year old son could unlock the front door when he woke me up early in the morning with some flowers from our front yard. It was precious and really scary at the same time.
My daughter climbed out of her crib one morning in 2021, Age 3, opened the front door, walked out to the road, luckily she was found by a passer by , we had no Idea, it was 5 mins before our alarms went off ...I'll never forget it
Becoming a parent gave me so much more grace for parenting moments like these. If we’re honest with ourselves, EVERY parent has had a moment of “Woah, that really could have gone wrong; we got lucky.”
Now the kid knows to walk to chic fil a and get free breakfast
I heard a comedian one time say a young child thinks their job is basically looking for death. They learn how to roll, they’ll roll off anything. They learn how to walk their looking for electric sockets to lick or the highest stair case to fall down from. It’s exhausting as a parent to protect them from themselves.
The child has some survival instincts. He at least covered his ears from contradictory squawkings of the idiot masses.
Literally every single gen X-er was “lost” by parents a minimum of a half dozen times during our childhood.
When my oldest son was 5, I turned around to show my 1 year old some ducks, meanwhile my 5 year old started running around to chase a bird and I heard a splash, realized he had fallen into the canal. I jumped in and got him out but man some kids just....don't have any clue what they're doing
Can we just give the parents a pat on their back for keeping their kid alive this long when he's that adventurous?! 😂
I’m not a parent. I know how fast kids can move and silently. So yeah scary stuff happens
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Top Comments (10)
I learned our then 3 year old son could unlock the front door when he woke me up early in the morning with some flowers from our front yard. It was precious and really scary at the same time.
My daughter climbed out of her crib one morning in 2021, Age 3, opened the front door, walked out to the road, luckily she was found by a passer by , we had no Idea, it was 5 mins before our alarms went off ...I'll never forget it
Becoming a parent gave me so much more grace for parenting moments like these. If we’re honest with ourselves, EVERY parent has had a moment of “Woah, that really could have gone wrong; we got lucky.”
Now the kid knows to walk to chic fil a and get free breakfast
I heard a comedian one time say a young child thinks their job is basically looking for death. They learn how to roll, they’ll roll off anything. They learn how to walk their looking for electric sockets to lick or the highest stair case to fall down from. It’s exhausting as a parent to protect them from themselves.
The child has some survival instincts. He at least covered his ears from contradictory squawkings of the idiot masses.
Literally every single gen X-er was “lost” by parents a minimum of a half dozen times during our childhood.
When my oldest son was 5, I turned around to show my 1 year old some ducks, meanwhile my 5 year old started running around to chase a bird and I heard a splash, realized he had fallen into the canal. I jumped in and got him out but man some kids just....don't have any clue what they're doing
Can we just give the parents a pat on their back for keeping their kid alive this long when he's that adventurous?! 😂
I’m not a parent. I know how fast kids can move and silently. So yeah scary stuff happens