Actually, this. 100% this.Kargathia said:It really depends on the situation. I occasionally got leashed as a kid, but then I had three siblings, and would otherwise run off the moment I could. Not "blithely wander about", but really run off. The experience was demeaning, but in hindsight I'd say it was justified.
Hell, I even unhooked the leash once, and stealthily tied it around a lamp post before running off.
Also pretty sure at least my mother is as good a parent as it gets.
Aaaaaaaaannnnnnnnndddddddddd someone summed up my thoughts in one perfect sentence. It just demeans both the child and the parent.Shadowstar38 said:If someone is such a horrible parent they need the child to be leashed up they probably shouldn't have children at all.
I was hit by a car when I was three, I ran away across the street. You know I remember that. Funny thing is I don't remember what I was thinking about before around seven or so, but I remember events all the way back to when I believe I was two.Blablahb said:But the chance of a child accidentally running off somewhere a car hits them is tiny. It's probably along the same lines as the chance of getting struck by lightning.Colin Murray said:The kid might not like a harness but if it's keeping them from being hit by a car you really can't argue with the results.
And even if, my parents always taught me to never run into the street without looking. That seems preferable an option to treating your child like some sort of animal.
So to answer the OP post, there's never a justified reason for putting your child on a leash.
Assuming you read the rest of that post I made, or at least the tl;dr, I think broken leg is one of those ones I would include as 'I-can-see-why-you're-doing-it'. Leashing does not inherently mean it's miles safer, that's a hugely flawed assumption and leads to the whole "I dont need to watch my kid" scenario I was pointing out.Colin Murray said:Of course parents should pay attention to the kid when they're on the harness. The reason you have the harness is to restrict the child's range of movement, it isn't a license to ignore your child. Kid could be eating something he picked up off the ground, or any number of things.CaptainMarvelous said:Alternatively you could, I dunno, watch the kid? While I haven't had kids, I've taken care of my neighbours 5 year old at various points in the last 5 years, their 2 year old for the last two and my sister's daughters from a range of ages so I have at least a little experience in this and I'm pretty anti-harness after a while.
My mom had to use one for my brother when she broke her leg. Without it, if he'd bolted (which he had the habit of doing) she'd have been unable to get him.
It's really easy to tell someone else how to parent children, and many self-appointed experts on the internet are little more than children themselves (this statement isn't directed at anyone in particular). Plenty of people shouldn't have children, but I'd argue that ones that leash theirs at least care enough about their kids to sacrifice their own public image for their child's safety.
You don't, actually.manaman said:I was hit by a car when I was three, I ran away across the street. You know I remember that.
So that's what you'd do to any adult too? would you hit your dog or cat or whatever animal you would/do own?Son of Songhai said:back on topic: no matter how badly behaved the kid is, they are still human and worthy of being treated like one. Leashes are what you use on animals and, therefore, unfit to be used on a human.
its undignified.
if the kid runs off on you, you swat them on the backside a few times so they will think twice about doing it again. if they keep doing it, you stop taking them to crowded places so to prevent Natural Selection from claiming your child (early).