Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Walt Disney World Resort Cast Members post your stupid guest tricks here. This forum is not for general Walt Disney World discussion. Please use the Break Room, for non stupid guest trick topics.
Brayon
Repeat Traveler
Repeat Traveler
Posts: 28
Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2007 3:24 am
Location: Tampa, Florida

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by Brayon » Wed May 23, 2007 8:38 pm

Syndrome wrote:I have never asked to be moved in a restaurant due to disruptive children, although I have thought pretty hard about it. But living in the Disney area means a much higher percentage of rampaging children than when I lived in Chicago. Still, that day may come...after all, back in IL (an archaic state where smoking is still allowed in restaurants), I often asked to be moved FAR FAR away from the smoking section, so why not away from screaming kidlets?
A little OT but related to this quote. A fellow CM friend of mine once suggested an "Adult Only" (age 16+) Dining Option for a few of our resturants, and an "Adult Only" (age 16+) Resort. This would be similar to what DCL has on the Ships and Castaway Cay. The idea was pretty much rejected due to WDW being a "Family" destination, and "how could you enforce the age restriction?"

I do know that That guest age 17, and younger are HIGHLY discouraged at some of the restuarants. That is fact at Victoria and Alberts. Children are allowed as long as they are well behave. I've seen a family that was asked to leave with no refund due to their 6 y/o son running around the dining room.



StephM
Regular Guest
Regular Guest
Posts: 120
Joined: Sat Mar 04, 2006 1:12 am
Location: Clermont, FL

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by StephM » Thu May 24, 2007 11:39 pm

Brayon wrote:A little OT but related to this quote. A fellow CM friend of mine once suggested an "Adult Only" (age 16+) Dining Option for a few of our resturants, and an "Adult Only" (age 16+) Resort. This would be similar to what DCL has on the Ships and Castaway Cay. The idea was pretty much rejected due to WDW being a "Family" destination, and "how could you enforce the age restriction?"

I do know that That guest age 17, and younger are HIGHLY discouraged at some of the restuarants. That is fact at Victoria and Alberts. Children are allowed as long as they are well behave. I've seen a family that was asked to leave with no refund due to their 6 y/o son running around the dining room.
It still stuns me that people ask about taking young kids to V&A's and some of the other restaurants. My oldest DD is 14...I MIGHT take her to V&A's, since she is a foodie and a well behaved young lady. But people ask about toddlers....."Does V&A's have high chairs?" I was like WHAT? :eek:

Seriously, you would think people would have more sense than to bring a 2 yr old to Artist's Point, California Grill....places where couples might be having a nice, kid-free romantic meal. Cripes. Get a sitter or do like we do, have one kid free meal a year at V&A's and save the other restaurants for later when we go to DW without the kids. Although if people had common sense, this would be a pretty boring board. ;)



Brayon
Repeat Traveler
Repeat Traveler
Posts: 28
Joined: Fri Feb 23, 2007 3:24 am
Location: Tampa, Florida

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by Brayon » Fri May 25, 2007 12:28 am

[quote="StephM"]It still stuns me that people ask about taking young kids to V&A's and some of the other restaurants. My oldest DD is 14...I MIGHT take her to V&A's, since she is a foodie and a well behaved young lady. But people ask about toddlers....."Does V&A's have high chairs?" I was like WHAT? :eek:

Seriously, you would think people would have more sense than to bring a 2 yr old to Artist's Point, California Grill....places where couples might be having a nice, kid-free romantic meal. Cripes. Get a sitter or do like we do, have one kid free meal a year at V&A's and save the other restaurants for later when we go to DW without the kids. Although if people had common sense, this would be a pretty boring board. ]

Back when I was taking Dining Calls for reservations, I had a guest complain about the fact that he was taking his 4 year old to V&A's, and he was charged the full price for the child. That $150.00 per person, and he didn't feel he should spend that on a 4 year old. I wanted to say don't bring him.

But back on Topic... I did see a good parent once at the Parks. She was busy with her two kids at EPCOT, when an unrelated chid fell down, and scrapped their leg. Before I could get over to the child, she was there helping him, until his mom turned around from watching Off Kilter, and nearly paniced.



SWTexasBelle
Regular Guest
Regular Guest
Posts: 104
Joined: Sun Nov 12, 2006 7:09 am
Contact:

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by SWTexasBelle » Fri May 25, 2007 8:25 am

I took my foodie 14 year old to V&A - but I knew she would be well-behaved and very interested in the whole experience.
One of my pet peeves is children allowed to ruin others dining. Teaching young children to behave is a pain, but far less of one than spending your life unable to enjoy eating out because your children are terrors!



User avatar
Zazu
Permanent Fixture
Permanent Fixture
Posts: 4133
Joined: Sat Feb 08, 2003 3:00 pm
Park: WDW
Position: retired
Location: 8 miles east of Spaceship Earth
Contact:

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by Zazu » Fri May 25, 2007 1:09 pm

StephM wrote:Although if people had common sense, this would be a pretty boring board.
You say that like it would be something BAD! :p:


Zazu

lttlsister
Wide-eyed Newcomer
Wide-eyed Newcomer
Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Mar 29, 2007 12:10 pm

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by lttlsister » Thu Jun 14, 2007 3:12 pm

I have been a lurker up to now, but I felt I had to respond to this one. My family is going to WDW in Nov of this year and as soon as I booked the trip (1 year in advance) I started telling my boys, who will be 7 & 5 at the time of the trip that there are certain rides that are not appropriate for them and under no circumstances will they ride them. My husband, of course, tries to talk me out of this plan, let them go on anything they want, but my feeling is if they go on any of the dark, too fast, too jerky, "big people" rides they will not enjoy and will be scared of the rest. I know I am sounding to overprotective, am sometimes I am, but this trip is a big deal for us and I want everyone (including me who will panic if we do try these rides) to enjoy them. So in two years when we plan to go again and they want to try some of the rides they didn't get this time, then for the older son, fine, he will be 9 by then and able to handle a lot more. This will be our frst trip in 15 years and the boys first trip ever, we are going to have so much to do that missing a couple rides will mean nothing!
I just can't understand why you would force your kids to do something they do not want to - it's a ride and in the big picture does it really matter if you miss that one ride!
Anyway, I just felt I needed to rant a little about this one - hope you didn't mind!
Lisa



User avatar
BRWombat
Permanent Fixture
Permanent Fixture
Posts: 5131
Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2004 2:00 pm
Department: Offsite Harmony
Position: Back Row Baritone
Location: Dallas area
Contact:

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by BRWombat » Fri Jun 15, 2007 9:59 am

lttlsister wrote:I have been a lurker up to now, but I felt I had to respond to this one. My family is going to WDW in Nov of this year and as soon as I booked the trip (1 year in advance) I started telling my boys, who will be 7 & 5 at the time of the trip that there are certain rides that are not appropriate for them and under no circumstances will they ride them. My husband, of course, tries to talk me out of this plan, let them go on anything they want, but my feeling is if they go on any of the dark, too fast, too jerky, "big people" rides they will not enjoy and will be scared of the rest. I know I am sounding to overprotective, am sometimes I am, but this trip is a big deal for us and I want everyone (including me who will panic if we do try these rides) to enjoy them. So in two years when we plan to go again and they want to try some of the rides they didn't get this time, then for the older son, fine, he will be 9 by then and able to handle a lot more. This will be our frst trip in 15 years and the boys first trip ever, we are going to have so much to do that missing a couple rides will mean nothing!
I just can't understand why you would force your kids to do something they do not want to - it's a ride and in the big picture does it really matter if you miss that one ride!
Anyway, I just felt I needed to rant a little about this one - hope you didn't mind!
Lisa
Thanks for being a caring parent, and welcome! :welcome: If I can throw my two cents in, though, while you are absolutely right that you should never force a child onto a ride that frightens them, you might consider being flexible in case they want to "be brave" and try.

My youngest turned 6 on his first trip to WDW, and he surprised us by wanting to hit some of the darker rides. I didn't think he'd want to do Haunted Mansion, for example, but he did even though it scared him. I held him all the way from the Stretching Room until we loaded in the Doom Buggies (and he was holding back pretty tightly!), but he made it and was laughing at the end.

So for sure don't force, but don't be afraid to let them ride, either. What better, safer way than a Disney ride to let them try to tackle their fears and build confidence?


"This would be a great place if we could only get rid of all these people." - Walt Disney

Image Image
VocalMajority
Twitter

Syndrome
Practically Lives Here
Practically Lives Here
Posts: 1285
Joined: Thu Jan 26, 2006 10:34 pm
Location: Celebration

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by Syndrome » Sat Jun 16, 2007 5:52 pm

We were at Mimi's Cafe last week...granted, it's the sort of place I'm not surprised at seeing kids, but this just grossed me out. A family's four year old kidlet was running around like a maniac with a handful of snotrag napkins. She ran up to the next booth and tossed the napkins on their table!! They didn't say anything, but they're lucky it wasn't me...I would have blown my nose in a napkin of my own and tossed it into their table. I mean, what are they going to say to me?! It's not like they can complain about tit for tat!



"If you are a dee, please don't marry a dee, 'cause then your kids will be dee dee dee." ....Carlos Mencia

"It's the difference between champagne and carbonated pee!" ....Homer Simpson

[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

Nice work, pal

lttlsister
Wide-eyed Newcomer
Wide-eyed Newcomer
Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Mar 29, 2007 12:10 pm

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by lttlsister » Thu Jun 21, 2007 11:32 am

BRWombat wrote:Thanks for being a caring parent, and welcome! :welcome: If I can throw my two cents in, though, while you are absolutely right that you should never force a child onto a ride that frightens them, you might consider being flexible in case they want to "be brave" and try.

My youngest turned 6 on his first trip to WDW, and he surprised us by wanting to hit some of the darker rides. I didn't think he'd want to do Haunted Mansion, for example, but he did even though it scared him. I held him all the way from the Stretching Room until we loaded in the Doom Buggies (and he was holding back pretty tightly!), but he made it and was laughing at the end.

So for sure don't force, but don't be afraid to let them ride, either. What better, safer way than a Disney ride to let them try to tackle their fears and build confidence?
Thanks for your input - I know I am overprotective and I try so hard not to be - but I also know that if something happens to one of my boys and I could have stopped it I would never forgive myself! The rides I am talking about are things like Aerosmiths rocking roller coaster, mission space, tower of terror, stuff like that. My 6 year old wanted to go into a haunted house at another local park last year and I knew he would be scared silly so I said no, so when he asks about the haunted mansion and I say yes, I think he will be very surprised.
Thanks again for responding - we have not been to WDW in 15 years and we had no kids then, so any info I am getting is all good to me!



Sarah Magdalene
Seasoned Pro
Seasoned Pro
Posts: 529
Joined: Thu Dec 06, 2007 9:17 pm
Location: Orlando

Re: Good Parenting (no, it's true! I saw it!)

Post by Sarah Magdalene » Fri Jun 27, 2008 11:58 am

We make my niece go on certain rides where we know she will eventually laugh about freaking out in at the end of the day. Snow White, Nemo at Epcot, etc. We only do age appropriate rides that may have dark parts that only freak out the under 4 set. While in the ride we always make her plush animal she brought with her freak out, making it say, "Ahhh no no - too dark too dark ... Ahh, scared, scared..." In the end, she's the one being brave for it, petting it, and telling her Unicorn, Kitty, (or whatever plushie she brought with her) that every thing's okay and it's not that scary.

At the end of the evening, she completely denies that she was scared and often insists that it was unicorn or kitty who was more scared than her. Saying that she "Just pretended to be..."


[font=Comic Sans MS]"I don’t think I’ve ever made that big a fool of myself, which is really saying something, because I’ve performed at theme parks."[/font]
- Blaine Anderson, GLEE

Post Reply