several months ago there was some grandparents with their grandsons in the store, the boys kept going up the escalator and back down in a loop and they started running and rough housing and I had to say "Please don't run!" a bunch. And another employee overheard the grandparents plan to let the boys play on the escalator while they shopped up stairs. I think right about this time I finally said "please don't play on the escalator" and the grandparents shot me a dirty look.
Anya ,'Dirty Girls'
Natter 76: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Foaminess
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
One of the reasons I don't expect we'll be opening the libraries as public spaces anytime soon is many people already treat the public library as child care. At ages that are really not appropriate.
I just got word that my community college course will be online only in the fall. We should have the funding to send some home lab kits to the students. Meanwhile my summer contract got upgraded to full online lecture/lab for 6 credit hours instead of the original 3 for just the hands-on lab it would normally have been.
The uni is making contingency plans for online for the fall, and even if classes are held on campus, numbers per section will be drastically reduced, meaning more sections to be covered.
All of my grades for the spring are in, and my students did much better than I expected going in. It took awhile for many to get their feet under them, but in the end most of them got the required work done.
Well, I've gone Full Petty and am not going down to the basement to restock the bathroom toilet paper for the fourth time in a row.
I am neither proud nor ashamed that I have my own bedroom stash, I am just DONE.
A number of years ago there seemed to be a wave of parents doing something like this - they'd drop their kids off at a library or toy store and then go on to do something they didn't want to haul the kids along for. This may have been the source of a sign I've seen reading something like, "unattended children will be given espresso and sent home with a puppy".
One of the reasons I don't expect we'll be opening the libraries as public spaces anytime soon is many people already treat the public library as child care. At ages that are really not appropriate.
We deal with this A LOT. It's frustrating. We made a pamphlet about it. There are signs posted! We had a vendor from the Farmers' Market send his sons over when they were 5 and 6! All Day! We finally had to have a talk with the family. I still think the younger one isn't old enough but every time I ask him a question he responds, "I'M EIGHT YEARS OLD!"
Note to self: When wearing masks, do not bring anything for lunch containing onions or garlic. Oy.
Masks may have done good things for dental hygiene. I find that I'm even more careful about brushing my teeth and using mouth wash these days.
Hah Toddson—I did wear a mask yesterday and go "oh man, my post dinner breath stinks!!"
Cash, is the kid saying he's 8 but he's 5? I'm confused. (I totally could've spent may hours perfectly happy at the library at 8, but many kids couldn't)
He was 4 when he started coming, so he's maybe 6 or 7. But his brother is 8. It's just weird. The way he talks, it's as if he's been instructed to tell us all that he's 8. He's very small.
We are seeing nationwide the effects of a lack of leadership at the federal level. It seems that responsibility keeps getting passed down one level. Fed to State, State to County, County to City. So our actions are fractured, and departments who are ill equipped to make these health designations and decisions are being tasked with rolling something out on a time line that is not realistic.
Spotify just rolled out an interactive map of people who are listening to the same song simultaneously in distant locations - it's really beautiful: [link]