Photo by: DougWW

The (Not So) Silent Type

Photo by: DougWW

I enjoy quiet time just as much as the next person, but lately I feel like we’ve been shushing our kids a little too much. Mostly, I’m talking about when we’re out in public. While I agree, we need to teach our kids the so-called rules of engagement when out and about, constantly asking them to quiet down just gets plain old. Yes, I want to teach my children to use their “indoor voices” and use their manners when we’re in restaurants and the like. It just seems to me we have become a bit intolerant when it comes to the everyday sounds of our children.

Honestly, unless a child is having a flat out screaming tantrum, I enjoy the many sounds of children. I realize though, this is not true for everyone. I vividly recall an instance when I was faced with the rude awakening that not everyone thinks my child is as cute as I think he is (the nerve).

Anyway, there we were, my 3 year old son and I doing the grocery shopping. I was just happy to have only one child to wrangle into the shopping cart. Armed with my list and a toy train to keep him occupied, I felt well prepared that we’d get through this shopping in a breeze. My son was happily making train sounds while I was focused on my list and the task at hand.

Was he being loud, yes, a little. Was he disturbing the peace? No, I don’t think so. Was he happy? YES…so… I was too. We even passed a few smiling faces down the aisles, picking up our goods. One woman even cooed…oh, he’s so cute. Yes he is, thank you (I thought).

Almost done and no tears, no whining, no complaining…just train sounds (woo..woo..all aboard!). We stopped to pick up some yogurt and apparently startled a woman contemplating between dannon and yoplait. “Oh my”, she exclaimed and seeing as we had startled her, I asked my son to lower his voice…see I’m sensitive to that.

But the train sounds continued, much to this woman’s dismay who then turned to her friend and loudly said, “that is so annoying”. Okay, I turned to walk away because as anyone who knows me will attest to, I do not like confrontations. But, I stopped, blood boiling, trying to remain calm and felt compelled to reply, “I’m sorry, please do no not talk to my son that way”. I don’t know what I expected her to say but she remained firm and replied “well, it’s loud and annoying”. I retorted with “he’s three years old and making train sounds for goodness sake!”

We both turned our separate ways, I wasn’t sure I had conveyed the right message to my son. I was still a little shaky from having had that confrontation. But it got me thinking…who was in the right? Here I was a mother with two young children just trying to get the grocery shopping done and to me, it seemed to be going smoothly. To her, we were a nuisance…“loud and annoying”.

So you see, can’t kids just be kids anymore? I try to respect other people’s need for quiet and privacy, however, we were not at the library, church, fancy restaurant, or some other place they frown upon when kids walk in. We were in a grocery store for heavens sake and all I really wanted to say was this: " geez lady, do you really need quiet while picking out your yogurt?" Apparently, she did.

So tell me, what do you think? Has our society become more intolerant to the “sounds” of children? Have you ever had a confrontation when someone thought your child was being too loud, if so, what did you do?

Melissa is a pediatrician turned stay at home Mom who is realizing that parenting rarely plays out like in the text books. She is enjoying this journey through parenthood and all the unexpected surprises that come along with it.

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140 Comments

Sorry about that. Our society seems to be encouraging rude behavior these days. We all have experienced it and I am really unsure why people act so nasty for no apparent reason, but sadly it happens. I learned from my DH that it is best to ignore and forget meanness ASAP. After all you are not responsible for her bad mood, so why let it effect you?

I do find myself constantly trying to quiet down my girls (6 & 8). Usually to no avail. It may work for a few minutes, then the volume creeps back up. I realize not everyone enjoys the noise and some expect perfectly behaved children. Unless Super Nanny can come to my home and show me how to achieve this, it's not much use. My husband suffers from PTSD and loud noises bother him. Even at home, I'm torn between letting my children be children, and trying to curb their loudness...

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I think she was just being plain old ignorant. Children are children and it so funny how people want them to grow up so fast and then complain when they act grown. To her I say GET A LIFE LADY, and you were good because honestly, I do not like confrontation but I would've told her to shove her yogurt you know where! Just ignore the ignorant people in this world. I hate when people react to children this way as if once before they were not once children. ughhhhh

1. The majority of attitudes verbalized here thus far are from a generation of same mindedness, the "I don't care, I'll do what I want" mindset. Spoiled and rebellious parenting style.
2...

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Lol, rolling my eyes, smirking. The yougrt lady makes a case for single's markets where there ARE NO CHILDREN. That way, she can live her live without EVER having to come in contact with children, which she's OBVIOUSLY ALLERGIC TO-SNORT!!! Whether she was having a "bad day", or thinks that her peace & quiet is more important than what everyone else is doing, she needs to make friends with an architect (build a bridge & GET OVER IT!!!)...

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Go, Marjorie!

I think yogurt lady's response is completely ridiculous. As you said, who needs quiet at the grocery store, for Pete's sake??? Even before I had a kid, I would have gone up and smiled at your kid and made some choo choo noises with him. It's not like he was having a tantrum, and even a tantrum is excusable at the store, I think. I pity parents with screaming kids at the store. Ya gotta eat, sheesh.

I think there are many forces contributing to the current anti-kid movement...

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My local news had a story a few weeks ago about a restaurant that posted a sign that said "No screaming or yelling children allowed". The restaurant owners did not want children in their restaurant if they were noisy. I thought the story was very sad. What was even worse were the comments posted on the news website for the article...

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I would say the noise level depends on the adults around you. Those without children may be less tolerable. The older generation, and you will see as you age, you become less tolerant of noises of the young or adults who are loud. There could, also, be a hearing problem of someone who has a hearing device. I don't have one, but knew someone who said louder sounds can be very annoying. As we grow older and hormones change so does our level of tolerance...

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I agree, this shopper was crabby and rude to voice her opinion out loud, seeing how this was a grocery store. My annoyances are rarely with children in a store, but rather rude adults, ironically, most of them women. HA! (laughing at the irony here because we're all women mostly on this site). One time, I distinctly remember standing in the check-out line while the mom behind me recognized and began exuberantly talking to the mom in front of me AS IF I WASN'T THERE...

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Being a mom of an exceptionally loud 4 yr old boy i often encounter the looks of other. As long as he is only using his voice and not his physical being to show joy-which usually accompanies the loudness i figure he is doing pretty darn good! And i have learned to grow thick skin!

Personally i get more bothered by listening to an adult having a cell phone conversation than a happy child making train sounds!

They say have the child push their own cart and be in charge of getting simple things into their cart from a written or picture list. They say have the children count the number of cans of soup, boxes of cereal, pull along a pull toy, be in a shopping cart with age appropriate toys to play with. It only takes imagination and trained parents to do and figure these things out. Just ask older children how much they like Johnny conducting a cacophony of screaching sounds to see others reaction...

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I do to believe that society as a whole has become intolerant to the sounds of children. i have a family member who tells her 4 nd 2 year old to be quiet constantly they hate it when there kids are loud out side screaming (happy screaming aka talking, playing loudly) while outside........

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I think it's ridiculous that you think your kid has the right to make annoying sounds in public. The store is not your living room. People let their children shriek, scream, talk super loud, make messes, touch everything, and general act like savages in public, then get angry when the rest of the world expect decorum. And before you say it, yes, I DO have kids. They are often complimented by strangers on their public behavior...

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I agree with the majority of responders who say that we need to allow our children to be chidren, and that the "yogurt lady" was being rude in her comments. Just wanted to put in another perspective though... did you happen to notice whether the lady was wearing hearind aids? If she was, perhaps the high pitched voice of a three year old making train sounds was irritating to her...

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Mothering is a highly contact sport. Contact (and confrontation) with our kids...contact with the general public who have a stake in our kids behavior...It doesn't end there. I have teenage boys and they were VERY verbal, noisy, and squirrely as young children. Childhood is a long period of socialization and a MAJOR part of that is learning to live peacefully and respectfully within a large group of people with differing needs...

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