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AIBU

....to find this disgusting

(46 Posts)
sunseeker Sat 22-Aug-15 13:40:10

As I have said before I don't have children so tend not to post on anything to do with them (not been there so can't really comment). However, today I saw something I need to rant about.

I had been to visit a friend and stopped at a supermarket I don't normally use. While waiting in the queue I looked through the window and saw a little girl of around 6 crouching in the gutter of the car park just outside the door - I then realised she was having a poo shock. Now I know sometimes when children have to go they REALLY have to go but I think the mother could have just picked her up and carried her into the supermarket toilets (which were no more than a few feet inside the door). The mother was just standing there smoking a cigarette making no attempt to give the poor child any kind of privacy - people were walking in and out of the shop the whole time. When she had finished they both walked away, got into a car and drove off. When I was finally being served I told the assistant what I had seen but she merely shrugged and said that at least this time it was a child! (Won't be visiting that supermarket again)

Alea Sun 23-Aug-15 22:20:16

I don't think having a wee on a roundabout, however clean and public, is really any better than a shop doorway dorsetpennt gringrin

Alea Mon 24-Aug-15 09:40:43

Please somebody else grin find this as funny as I did?

Elegran Mon 24-Aug-15 09:46:54

Is that a traffic roundabout (risking getting run down to get there?) or a children's roundabout (pooing where children will play???)

annsixty Mon 24-Aug-15 09:50:55

I think dorsetpennt's iPad was having fun there. If I didn't preview mine comes up with some howlers. grin

elena Mon 24-Aug-15 11:44:31

Alea, I giggled too smile

I remember being on a beach with the children, where there were no toilets or shops nearby. Wees in the sand dunes are not a problem, but DS wanted a poo, so we used his bucket! Took it back to the car and disposed of it down a drain.

DD2 was always, always wanting to go at inconvenient moments, but somehow or other, I always managed to find somewhere, without having her do it in the street.

thatbags Mon 24-Aug-15 13:14:40

I think if one's child is always always needing the loo, one gets good at noticing suitable places so one's always ready for the demand.

Another interpretation of the woman's behaviour (at a stretch, but a possible stretch) could be that the supermarket loos were out of order or busy and there was nothing else available – a shortage, in short, of public toilets. Not sure I'd have been so bold as she but who knows in desperation?

Yes, I know it was the child doing the business but the child was in the charge of an adult.

Kittycat Tue 25-Aug-15 16:11:21

I used to have a baby bag(duffel bag type)that had a large zipped compartment at the bottom to put a potty in! This was nearly 40 years ago, not sure huge potties you get now would fit! But it was so handy, it meant a familiar place to 'go' no matter where. We didn't have a car so it was always hung on the back of our pushchair, our portable potty! Also became a feature when playing the game ' I'm going on holiday and in my suitcase I'm going to pack......a portable potty!'
Luckily a lot more places have toilets now,so it's not so difficult when out and about with little ones.

annodomini Tue 25-Aug-15 20:00:25

If a dog owner can be fined for allowing a dog to 'perform' in the street, why not a negligent parent?

itsazoohere Wed 26-Aug-15 01:09:55

I've known children (3 and under) who have needed a wee-but then the poo has followed.
If it was me, I'd be there with bags (like I am for my dogs).

thatbags Wed 26-Aug-15 06:30:26

I expect a parent can be charged for allowing a child to foul a pavement. Someone got charged for allowing a child to throw an apple core into a grass verge/hedge. I don't know what the eventual outcome of that charge was but it seemed a bit OTT to me. The apple was regarded as litter, which it wouldn't have been in a verge or hedge, but food for small creatures.

Meanwhile actual litter remains a problem and one never hears of anyone being charged.

thatbags Wed 26-Aug-15 06:32:59

Should have said allowing and not clearing up afterwards.

On the other hand, if one didn't have the means to clear up, imagine the embarassment of having to go into the shop and ask for a bag. It would not stop me from doing just that, small child in tow, but I can understand someone not doing it.

It is possible that the woman was mortified by the predicament and just wanted to vanish off the scene pronto.

TwiceAsNice Wed 26-Aug-15 07:46:47

When my granddaughter was small she was always asking to go to the toilet at difficult times. We carried a child's ports potty around in the car which you could fit a special bag on . The child went in the bag which had crystals in it to soak up the urine ( and anything else that might follow!) and then you could tie up the bag and dispose of it . It saved our embarrassment many times.

TwiceAsNice Wed 26-Aug-15 07:47:09

Porta not port

feetlebaum Wed 26-Aug-15 08:41:50

I believe the fullers of cloth all used urine in their trade...

thatbags Wed 26-Aug-15 08:52:38

Yes, people used to collect it for them (in buckets) and they would come round and get it, presumably in barrels or something on a horse drawn cart.

thatbags Wed 26-Aug-15 08:52:57

An 'aromatic' trade, wot?

Stansgran Wed 26-Aug-15 11:45:29

Was it honey men in Australia who used to collect night soil? I seem to remember something Clive James wrote or I'm very confused.

numberplease Wed 26-Aug-15 21:38:09

I once read a book set in the 17th century, where someone had taken over an old, dirty property, and turning it into a shop. They needed ammonia to clean with, and left large urns outside the shop for passers by to wee into, then used the urine to scrub the place out with. It might have been clean, but must have been a bit whiffy!

Elegran Wed 26-Aug-15 22:22:36

99 facts about urine. All you ever wanted to know about pee, and more.

Greyduster Thu 27-Aug-15 12:18:18

stansgran when we were posted to Belgium in the early seventies, they were apparently still using night soil in agriculture. We were issued with instructions from the military medical authorities (American) not to eat any locally bought salad, leaf or root vegetables that had not been soaked in Milton solution prior to being eaten! I don't suppose the Belgians did the same and they didn't seem to be dropping like flies from horrible diseases, but we all did as we were told anyway. We got through a lot of Milton!