A
Allegra
Guest
6yo has been working on her responsibility and social skills by completing small transactions, sometimes with me along side and sometimes with me watching from the car. Things like going into the gas station for a jug of milk, paying for the take and bake pizza at Papa Murphy’s, and taking in books to the library. She’s proud of herself when she does this and it teaches her to wait patiently, say excuse me, please, thank you, etc. This also helps me out because I don’t have to bring her little siblings out of the car in all of their mittened, snowbooted hassle. Anyway, we had to drop off books at the college library a few days back and we had a really awful experience with a snot behind the desk. Basically, I sent her in with the books and watched her go up and stand at the desk, but she came out a minute later looking confused. I asked her what was wrong and she said the person behind the desk “wasn’t talking”. I asked her a few questions like “were they on the phone” and “were they talking to someone else first” and she said “No. They were looking at me but they wouldn’t talk.” I told her to just go set the books on the counter, but she said she didn’t want to go back in alone. So, I got out the stroller and the babies and went inside and went up to the counter and asked what the problem was. The person behind the desk told me he didn’t talk to “people’s children”. So I had my daughter take her brother over to the Harry Potter themed sitting area as I not-so-charitably informed him that children, in fact, are people themselves and giving a child the silent treatment was rude and childish. Then I chewed out the supervisor for letting such an idiot work there and for the inconvenience of having to wake up one of my babies and haul them all into the library because his employee “doesn’t talk to people’s children”. (When I got home, I also emailed some other people about the experience and considered calling the news but decided that was probably a bit too much.)
Anyway, since then, my daughter has lost her confidence for doing this sort of thing. She no longer wants to go up to the counter alone or talk to the adults. I’ve explained to her that the “mean guy” was the one with the problem and nearly every other person she will ever encounter will be nice. She still seems to feel that she’s doing something wrong. I’m wondering how much I should push. Should I just wait until she’s ready or should I tell she has to? Or should I do a more subtle bribery, like give her a $5 and tell her she can get whatever she wants if she will go into Dairy Queen and hope a positive experience will get her back on track? Maybe try to get her to go in with her older cousin?
Do you think I should call the news? I wish I’d had one of those phones that take videos!
Anyway, since then, my daughter has lost her confidence for doing this sort of thing. She no longer wants to go up to the counter alone or talk to the adults. I’ve explained to her that the “mean guy” was the one with the problem and nearly every other person she will ever encounter will be nice. She still seems to feel that she’s doing something wrong. I’m wondering how much I should push. Should I just wait until she’s ready or should I tell she has to? Or should I do a more subtle bribery, like give her a $5 and tell her she can get whatever she wants if she will go into Dairy Queen and hope a positive experience will get her back on track? Maybe try to get her to go in with her older cousin?
Do you think I should call the news? I wish I’d had one of those phones that take videos!
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