New York's transportation system is amazing. It allows for nondrivers like me (cantankerous road-ragers who dream of flattening pedestrians) to hop into a tin box that gets me from Point A to Point B. Generally it can get me almost anywhere and if I'm lost, walking enough in any direction will land me in one of NYC's many train stations. Of course, it is not without its faults.
Being forced into a small space with people who are different from you in smell, culture, economic status, values, dress code, etc creates a need for patience and tolerance. Sadly these are traits I myself do possess in great quantity And this is where the point of my rant comes in:
Bad parenting on trains drives me crazy.
I'm waiting for my train, the 1 in a stop near my neighborhood on my way to work. I am sitting on bench, which is empty because the train was pulling out of the station as I reached the platform (it's the pits). I am trying to read Life of Pi by Yann Martel to assure myself that I have not because brain dead during the summer after rewatched seasons of Skins (the UK version) and Gossip Girl. After a few minutes the station begins to fill again and before I know it, I am surrounded by a family: a woman, young girl, and teenage boy to my left, and two more women to my write. I assume they are a family as they are conversing with other over me.
It is immediately obvious that the children are annoying and the parents incompetent. At once the young girl is screaming to hear the sound of her voice echo off the old bricks of the dome-like station. Her mother sees the child is being disruptive but does nothing but try to converse with the woman on my other side over the noise. When the train finally does pull into the station, the little girl rushes to the door practically shouldering me out of the way even though I had stood from my seat was at the platform edge before her. And she does not wait for the departing passengers to leave as she charges through bodies (one of the rudest things people do in public transportation - and honestly, if you're below the age of 30, you're young enough to chance standing) to find a seat in a practically empty car.
When the train is finally in motion, I am subjected to watching the rude little girl turn my magical tin box of transportation into a jungle gym. She is yelling and standing on her seat throwing herself on the to pole in the center of the car and sliding down over and over and over again. The other passengers and I look on in horror.
When she becomes bored of this, she takes to walking on the empty seats of the car, seemingly fascinated by the changing colors of the seats: red, orange,yellow, red, orange, yellow. She throws herself onto the pole slides down, and starts again on the other side of the car. She flings herself back and forth, back and forth from side of the train to the other. She is an irritated primate at the zoo and we, the other passengers, watch her accordingly.
The adults meanwhile are conversing amongst themselves, seemingly unaware other the child's behavior. Meanwhile the older brother (a teenage boy of at least 16) has started banging on the empty seat between us as though he's a beatnik poet on bongos. No words are said to discourage the children's behavior until I get up to leave.
The fact that people need to be subjected to other people's rude children and that said people aren't versed enough in respectful etiquette to reign in their children is just unfair. It's like torturing strangers for the fun of it, ruining their commute. And worse, when someone does look over at the parents in horror or confusing, they generally stare back annoyed and insulted, as though, I'm the bad guy in this situation.
(sigh)
I have no more words.
Let me know if I'm being completely unreasonable.
Share your own stories.
Being forced into a small space with people who are different from you in smell, culture, economic status, values, dress code, etc creates a need for patience and tolerance. Sadly these are traits I myself do possess in great quantity And this is where the point of my rant comes in:
Bad parenting on trains drives me crazy.
I'm waiting for my train, the 1 in a stop near my neighborhood on my way to work. I am sitting on bench, which is empty because the train was pulling out of the station as I reached the platform (it's the pits). I am trying to read Life of Pi by Yann Martel to assure myself that I have not because brain dead during the summer after rewatched seasons of Skins (the UK version) and Gossip Girl. After a few minutes the station begins to fill again and before I know it, I am surrounded by a family: a woman, young girl, and teenage boy to my left, and two more women to my write. I assume they are a family as they are conversing with other over me.
It is immediately obvious that the children are annoying and the parents incompetent. At once the young girl is screaming to hear the sound of her voice echo off the old bricks of the dome-like station. Her mother sees the child is being disruptive but does nothing but try to converse with the woman on my other side over the noise. When the train finally does pull into the station, the little girl rushes to the door practically shouldering me out of the way even though I had stood from my seat was at the platform edge before her. And she does not wait for the departing passengers to leave as she charges through bodies (one of the rudest things people do in public transportation - and honestly, if you're below the age of 30, you're young enough to chance standing) to find a seat in a practically empty car.
When the train is finally in motion, I am subjected to watching the rude little girl turn my magical tin box of transportation into a jungle gym. She is yelling and standing on her seat throwing herself on the to pole in the center of the car and sliding down over and over and over again. The other passengers and I look on in horror.
When she becomes bored of this, she takes to walking on the empty seats of the car, seemingly fascinated by the changing colors of the seats: red, orange,yellow, red, orange, yellow. She throws herself onto the pole slides down, and starts again on the other side of the car. She flings herself back and forth, back and forth from side of the train to the other. She is an irritated primate at the zoo and we, the other passengers, watch her accordingly.
The adults meanwhile are conversing amongst themselves, seemingly unaware other the child's behavior. Meanwhile the older brother (a teenage boy of at least 16) has started banging on the empty seat between us as though he's a beatnik poet on bongos. No words are said to discourage the children's behavior until I get up to leave.
The fact that people need to be subjected to other people's rude children and that said people aren't versed enough in respectful etiquette to reign in their children is just unfair. It's like torturing strangers for the fun of it, ruining their commute. And worse, when someone does look over at the parents in horror or confusing, they generally stare back annoyed and insulted, as though, I'm the bad guy in this situation.
(sigh)
I have no more words.
Let me know if I'm being completely unreasonable.
Share your own stories.