GuestJockey wrote:I think I may have told this one before, but it fits this thread too perfectly.
I got pulled from City Hall to work GC for the evening parade. As I'm standing at the crossing in front of Market House, I look up the street and see Alice holding the hand of a girl who couldn't have been more than 5. the girl is crying and Alice is hurrying in the City Hall direction, so I figured she was lost. I ran out to meet them and just as Alice was explaining to me (in character :) ) that her parents had gotten lost, the little girl saw her mom further up the street and took off running to her. Alice and I chased her up the street to make sure it was mom and not just the kid bolting, and we saw mom bend over like she was going to hug the kid and say "there you are, I was so worried."
Instead, she bends over and smacks the little girl across the face, and screams "Don't you ever do that again!". Alice and I stood in shocked silence and the entire section people waiting for the parade on the curb went silent. Before I could figure out what to say, mom was dragging the little one by the arm out of the park. I heard some guy boo her as they passed, and I turned to Alice who just said "Oh, dear!" and I thanked her for trying to help and we both went back to our posts.
This makes me very sad for that poor young girl... :(
DisneyMom wrote:Yep, embarassing teenagers is the best way! Mwahaha! :twisted:
It is not child abuse, but I have been known to drag hubby on Soarin' (he hates heights) He'll go on but looks like a cat clinging on the curtains when the Rottweiler walked into the room!

Guess I better stop if I want to stay married.....
And I even told him we would sit him in between the two of us and we would hold his hands on either side, so he wouldn't be scared! ;)
LittleDollClaudia wrote:I've got one.
We were walking through Fantasyland. (of course the land of tantrums, screaming, and downright unacceptable behavior, oh yeah the kids act up too! )
See this little kid in the Dumbo line, tears streaming down his face. Mama who I swear looked about 19 if a day. She's all smiles, totally oblivious to her boy, or so I think. "I don't wanna go. I'm scared." he sniffles. She fires back at him, "Hey, we didn't come here for YOU. It's my turn to have some fun. Shut-up or I won't be able to go on."
Uh, yeah. This isn't Knotts, dumbass. You don't need to torture your poor child so you can have 5 minutes that he will suffer for in therapy for 20 years.
That line (bold mine) is too funny! Bwahaha!
Parents can be so childish sometimes. You would think the kids have more sense than half the parents seen in the Parks. It is so sad to see the kids taking the brunt of the parents short temper, or being too hot and tired themselves to be handle a situation better. They do and say unbelievable things and I want to smack some them so hard sometimes and tell them, "Just look at what you are doing to your child!"
These emptyheaded moroons would not get it if you slapped THEM across the face like they do their kids....The frustration levels are high, their expectations are high and they lose it if one little thing goes off track or schedule for them, when it would be better to have SOME plans but NOT go commandoing all over the Parks when the little ones cannot keep up and then blame all the problems and frustrations on a kid who just is being human, hungry, tired, overwhelmed, and in bad need of rest and down time. A good swim would help sometimes. A nap would help sometimes. healthy food would be a good thing. And I am not just talking about the kids, the parents need it too to keep their temperament in check. Although some are just abusive and need to be locked up, for the most part I think it is just a lot of heat, hunger and tiredness and go, go, going that gets EVERYONE into a mood.
Susi