Was this a rude/ignorant thing to say or am I being to sensitive?

I agree that this is probably what the cashier was thinking. She probably thought that the kid was just playing a game on the Nook while dad was doing all the work, and a lot of people would consider that to be a bad thing. I imagine she thought she was “helping” by pointing out to dad that the kid could be doing some of the work.

Honestly? If I saw a kid playing Angry Birds while the dad was unloading all the groceries?
No, I wouldn’t SAY anything, but I would be THINKING, “Man, that is one spoiled kid. Why doesn’t the parent teach that kid how to help out?”

BWAHAHAHAHAHAH!

Oh, she’ll be fine. And a Doper before you know it! :smiley:

nm

So, instead of saying something like, “Your daughter is very well behaved, sir,” or “Would you like these stamps for our promotional give away of some celebrity-endorsed crapware?” she makes an openly critical accusation and dismissively ignores the actual customer who is paying her and addresses an eight year old? I suck at making conversation that doesn’t revolve around quantum mechanics or why on Earth Hollywood keeps paying Jason Statham to make the exact same movie over and over again, and I could make better customer-appropriate small talk than that.

Stranger

A lot of people are allowed to post on their iPhones, Nooks, iPads, et cetera in writing settings where to many people it is acceptable to post with broken grammar and punctuation. I once saw a poster…et cetera, et cetera.

Being judgmental about the behavior of other people’s children when you have zero context or knowledge is kind of jerkish in the same way as pedantically correcting someone’s grammar, especially in the passive agressive way you apply it to the o.p.

Stranger

This. I also would guess that the cashier was an older lady & less tech orientated.

I also would realize that my daughter would be the 1 in 10,000 exception of all the other same situations they have seen or experienced. I would used it as way to brag on my daughter & be proud that I was a better parent than the other 10,000 people that cashier had seen that day.

You & yours are not special little snow flakes.

I do not believe in any perfect 8 year old.
I do not believe in any perfect parent.
I do not believe in any perfect cashier.
I do believe a lot of people are spring loaded to several other positions… :rolleyes:

One of the things I do is save helpful little stories or quotes. I posted this one in response to the OP, but just in case you didn’t see it I’m reposting it to you. From what you wrote I think you’ll like it.

"One day Socrates was walking down a street with some friends when a nobleman approached. As was customary, Socrates greeted him, but the nobleman walked straight past, declining to return the courtesy. The friends of the philosopher were angry at the nobleman but Socrates used the incident to teach a lesson.

‘Suppose,’ said Socrates, ‘you meet a man on the street with poorer clothing than your own? Would that make you angry? Why then are you angry at a man who has poorer mental habits than you possess?’

The friends of Socrates were enlightened by hearing of this totally new way to respond to a so-called insult." The Daily Guru

The OP is the FATHER? Geez, I gotta go re-read it too, ha ha

btw, I don’t see numbers on the posts. How’d you know it was # 26?

I think WhyNot has a good point that a boy playing on a tablet and not helping out may well not have inspired a comment, as there’s still this idea that women do the shopping and men do their best not to chew off their leg and run for the exit.

On the other hand, a girl futzing on a tablet while dad worked on the car would get a pass but a boy would not.

Upper right hand corner of each post.
Next to the # :wink:

Sounds good. Only problem is, HINDSIGHT is twenty-twenty.

Savor this now. Because in a very few short years, she’s going to be turning that wit on YOU. :smiley:

Smart/funny child you got there. You musta b doing something right. u gotta b pleased. “And the Oscar goes to,…”

Not me. I assume you’re the man who kidnapped these kids and they haven’t seen their real parents for years, but if I look at you unpleasantly you’ll notice and wait until I get off and kill me,…

Oh, sorry, too much TV.

“Helicopter Mom.” I guess I don’t get out much. Hadn’t heard that b4. Have to add it to my internal dictionary. :slight_smile:

Ah, yes. thank you

I think it was **Hal Briston *who was buying formula and got some kind of comment about it from the cashier. And responded "Her mother died in childbirth and can’t supply any breastmilk."

*Her mother didn’t die in childbirth.

I’d be annoyed with the first remark in particular. I don’t care what anyone thinks about the way I parent my children, I do not need judgmental comments, and I don’t owe anyone an explanation for why my child might be using a Nook in a grocery store line. My kids are polite and I insist that they make eye contact and interact appropriately when someone speaks to them, but in the circumstances you described, your daughter’s behavior was not out of line.
If cashiers are required to make small talk (and I know some of them are), “How are you folks doing today?” is really not a difficult starting place.

I don’t like any personal comments or questions by a cashier. I especially dislike comments or questions about items I’m buying, like asking me “Are these any good?” or “Are you buying these for your wife?” (I don’t have a wife, and it would still be rude if I had one.)

The worst was when a pharmacy cashier commented that she hadn’t seen my mother in a while. My mother had passed away.

Exactly. The cashiers where I do most of my grocery shopping usually say, “How are you doing?” or some variation. This is usually followed by “Did you find everything you needed today?” How hard is that?