This is just a bunch of gaslighting. There is literally nothing wrong with a child of six going into a public building… Maybe you should worry about your own grace?
Gaslighting? I think you might mean victim-blaming?
You are trying to instill confidence in your child. I get that. I’m trying to convince you to convince your child that in your house mistakes are treated as mistakes, not as permanent character traits. You do that by saying “that was a foolish thing to do” and avoiding saying “that guy is an idiot who should never have been hired in the first place.”
Forget mercy. What you want to do is to convince your child that while the incident was upsetting, it is not something she can’t handle. It is the kind of mistake people make, and she can handle people who make that kind of mistakes. Some people, for whatever reason, don’t always use the manners it is fair to expect them to use. OK, we can deal with that. We can make up for it with mercy.
What you would be teaching her by that is that
her mistakes will always be treated with mercy. You are teaching her that just as doing a foolish thing doesn’t make that man a fool, her current reluctance to jump back into doing things that a confident person would do doesn’t mean she isn’t a confident person. You teach her that holding back from things she used to feel comfortable doing is a totally normal reaction that any confident person might feel.
Do you see what I’m getting at?
If you are not harsh even with people who have earned some harshness from you, your children will trust that you will not be harsh with them even when they have earned some harshness from you. If you are proportional in your response to strangers who really mess up, they will know that you will be proportional in your response when they really mess up. If you don’t make a mistake into a reason to think less of a person, not even when it is a really bad mistake, your children will know that no mistake they make, no fault they are still working on and no other isolated incident is going to change what you think of them as persons.
Do you want your daughter to be confident? Then treat bad things that happen to her as one of those things that happen that we get past with mercy.
When our children fell down, we neither said, “You’re not hurt, don’t cry” and we also didn’t say “Oh that was such a fall! Come here, let us comfort you, oh that was so terrible!” We said, “Wow, that looks like it hurt. Are you OK?” Likewise, I think by making so much of this and making the guy who messed up into an idiot who should have never been hired, what you could be doing is giving your daughter the fear that if someone doesn’t treat her right,
she is going to get them into trouble. That is not going to help her self-confidence. Let her live in a world where people make mistakes, and they’re corrected, and we hope they do better next time. That is a world where a child can feel safe in feeling self-confident.