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Mums on their phones

(106 Posts)
mrsmopp Tue 02-Aug-16 21:52:40

I'm seeing this all the time.
Mum with a buggy gets on the bus, sits down, gets her phone out and spends the whole journey ignoring her child as she is gossiping on the phone. The child tries to speak to the mum but is ignored. You see it everywhere, in parks, cafes, on trains. Don't mothers speak to their children any more? Don't they look out the window and show the child interesting things outside? I used to do that. The children are not learning communication skills at all as the mums are not interested.
Don't bother speaking to your kid, give him a pack of wotsits to keep him quiet till you get home and stick him in front of the telly. So sad.

LullyDully Sat 06-Aug-16 12:32:26

If they weren't on their phones( these visible everywhere mums who do exist we must all agree), would they be talking meaningfully with their children? Maybe not.

Lewlew Sat 06-Aug-16 10:34:15

I think the criticism is aimed at parents who are totally on their mobiles all the time when out with their children, not those making call that are necessary or taking an unplanned call, or arranging something.

It's about those who are so totally on their phone all the time, or playing Pokemon, CandyCrush, etc when out that the children are bored and feel ignored.

My DIL is a hard working career mum and must use her phone when she's out with DGG, but being with her daughter takes priority and she returns most calls when she gets back home and baby is down for her nap.

moonbeames Sat 06-Aug-16 08:59:26

I don't think that anyone is condemning anyone. We all know or should know if we have had children that the role of a new mother is a very difficult one. I remember this vividly. So much to do and not enough time. That is why if grandparents are lucky enough to have time with their grandchildren it can be so rewarding both ways. It can be so much fun and we can teach them a lot, reading, games, dress ups and of course outside if we can in nature. Electronic media may have to be monitored a bit and leave time for "imagination."

SueDonim Fri 05-Aug-16 22:25:12

I agree with YoungerGeneration. I'm sure there are parents (why single out just the mums??) who overuse phones/technology and ignore their children but that's happened in every generation of parents. I remember my own mum complaining about XYZ's children who were always roaming the streets causing trouble!

I think most parents do a good job, at least, the young families that I know are. It's not necessary to be perfect, good enough is fine. smile

LumpySpacedPrincess Fri 05-Aug-16 22:00:49

Posted too soon! They may have been judged as looking at their screens instead of parenting. They weren't they were all having a great time.

LumpySpacedPrincess Fri 05-Aug-16 21:58:35

I spent several hours out today with my daughter and her friend PokemonGoing, run into lots of parents along the way doing the same thing.

townie Fri 05-Aug-16 21:44:34

I'm with Lully and Younger. Of course some of the points made here are valid but I'm very uncomfortable with grandmothers judging and condemning young mothers as a whole, as here, as if their (our) generation were perfect parents. This sort of backward looking with rose tinted glasses is one of the less attractive features of some GN threads. ((I also find there are some very old- fashioned attitudes to gender equality here - eg, the thread where many saw it as the 'job' of the man to buy expensive jewellery, which shocked me - but that's another discussion).

Stansgran Fri 05-Aug-16 14:45:13

I must add that the stuff they watch is dreadful.has anyone else seen my little pony cartoons? Didnt intend to derail thread.

Stansgran Fri 05-Aug-16 14:43:49

I do agree with all the above but I also remember how isolating it was to be a young mum in a new part of town not knowing anyone and longing for someone anyone to call. ( pre mobile days) I'm also very very guilty of using the tv as a baby sitter at the moment as I have two DGCs with me and I let them watch tv while I have my bath in the morning and while each child is having a bath after their tea.

Elegran Fri 05-Aug-16 14:40:23

I didn't think any of those were the norm or OK - except for the car seats which had not been invented when mine were young. When they did appear I thought they were great.

If these young women really are making those important phone calls, then no blame on them - but it is odd that one call seems to take up an entire bus journey and involve detailed discussions of subjects I wouldn't have thought were of interest to their doctor, their pluimber or their husband.

YoungerGeneration Fri 05-Aug-16 14:18:14

Coming over from Mumsnet after this thread has been mentioned there. I find it awfully sad that Mothers feel they have to attack each others parenting styles in this way. I wonder if it makes older Mothers feel better about their own parenting to put down younger Mothers. We are all trying our best. You don't know if that Mother with the phone is texting her husband about something important, arranging a doctor's appointment for her child or booking in a household appointment. All of which can be done via smartphones. I don't agree with always being on the phone when you are looking after children but I think you need to judge each individual circumstance. I can't help but feel that older generations look through their past with rose tinted glasses too. It used to be the norm to smoke in pregnancy, let your child go off playing for the day and not come back till hours later, to take them into pubs whilst parents socialised, to not have car seats, to think it's ok to take a belt to a child to smack them and teach them a lesson. These things thankfully are outdated as we know better now. Some of those are also far worse than a mum catching up on her phone for a few minutes. Please older generation stop judging and think, you don't know the circumstances. Being a parent is also hard enough without being constantly judged.

LullyDully Fri 05-Aug-16 12:09:30

Perhaps some parents talk to their kids and some don't. Children were ignored before mobile phones. I am uncomfortable knocking young mums and indulging too much in " rose coloured glasses". P.S. I was a wonderful mother if I remember rightly.

moonbeames Fri 05-Aug-16 09:41:37

As I said in my earlier post. I believe that now more than ever us grandparents have an even more important role to play in the development of our grandchildren. Parents are just so busy now, work, entertainment, phones, computers, ipads etc. etc. I believe that the buck stops here with us. We can make an enormous difference to a child's development with the T.V. phones and everything else electronic turned off. We can read to them, help them with puzzles, develop their imagination in play and role play. We can prepare them to be ready for school and have the confidence in themselves to thrive. My grand-daughter is not yet 3 and has she got imagination, she is now beginning to make up her own little stories. "Turn off electronics, turn on imagination,"

Misha14 Fri 05-Aug-16 06:49:07

When these children get to school they are very disadvantaged in comparison to the children who have been talked to. They are behind in their vocabulary, reasoning and social skills. For our children to become successful members of society we must talk to, encourage and nurture them, so that they grow up with a sense of their own identity and that they and other people around them, matter.

Eloethan Fri 05-Aug-16 00:23:39

Brilliant poem micmc - very clever. I'd love to hear it read out in the Geordie dialect.

Nelliemoser Thu 04-Aug-16 20:08:12

I talked to mine a lot and my daughter does with hers.

DGS1 had very good speech at around 14/15 mnth.

DGS 2 is slower with his speech but his comprehension is good. His mum talks to him a lot. Probably like my DC1 who only said a little bit here and there until he was 2+ then just started talking in sentences.

I think its about time we had some strong publicity about how important talking to your children is and how damaging failing to do this is.

barbarafyles Thu 04-Aug-16 19:52:04

It's very worrying. Communications skills are very poor in many children starting school, with boys being up to two years behind girls. "OK, but they'll catch up", some parents say. Well they may or may not. Would you leave it to chance? As a Reception class teacher, I'm fully aware of the damage that this lack of communication skills can cause -it could mean that children are playing catch up from day one of starting school. There's a F.R.E.E report at www.mykidsmatter.co.uk that covers the 7 Big Mistakes that many parents unwittingly make that can seriously compromise their child's success at school. A must read if you have a little one under 5.

Nvella Thu 04-Aug-16 19:02:49

A friend and I were walking behind a mum who was pushing a pram and had a toddler with her who was falling further and further behind her. She was on the phone. The toddler fell over and she didn't even notice. We had to pick the child up and then yell out to the mother to stop. This was on the pavement of a very busy London road. The mum was completely unconcerned and didn't pause in her conversation!

HootyMcOwlface Thu 04-Aug-16 19:00:50

I've seen them at nursery picking up their children, not even bothering to say hello, just texting on their phones. If not on their phones then they have those headphones on listening to music! And they wonder why their children have speech and language difficulties?! [shakes head]

Grandmama Thu 04-Aug-16 19:00:43

I don't have a mobile phone and unless I need to look something up on the internet (eg bus times etc) I don't log on until about 6pm to check emails and that's it. When I took my 5 year old GD to the park last week all the mothers were on mobile phones. Time and time again someone on a phone almost walks into me on the pavement. I use a student bus route and the students are all on phones or have headphones on so conversation with them is impossible. Why do we need WiFi on local buses?? My GD had a pushchair that faced me so we talked all the time. And - there's no TV when she's with me. DH and I don't put the TV on until at least 6pm, sometimes not until C4 news at 7pm and it's often turned off at 8pm.

2J8DATLAS Thu 04-Aug-16 18:59:23

Can anyone tell me why these parents who are constantly on their phones, have children.

1974cookie Thu 04-Aug-16 18:53:19

As a car driver, it never ceases to amaze me when I see Mums' with a pushchair carrying their precious little bundles , phone glued to the Mums' ear whereby she is completely lost in conversation with whoever, as they approach a crossing without looking to see what the traffic is doing ( Or not as the case may be ).
However:
This I find the very, very scary bit.
Which one of the above are going to be the most likely victim should a car be unable to stop?
It truly frightens me .

Casawan Thu 04-Aug-16 18:41:08

I see this all the time, young women walking along a busy road, pushing a pushchair and chatting away on a phone, leaving little children to trail along behind them - with all the dangers of possibly stepping out into the road. What on earth do they find to talk about for so long? And don't get me started about the stupid idiots who haul their children across roads dodging cars because they are too impatient to wait for a safe crossing. While collecting g'dtrs from school, I have rarely seen a mother actively teaching little ones about road safety, but there are plenty of grandparents doing that. And what about the dipsticks in charge of pushchairs who wait to cross roads with the pushchair hanging off the kerb, just asking to be clipped?
Mind you, having got that off my chest, I walked to school on my own while in the infants school, back in the mid fifties, and I know the little boy who lived close by also took himself to and from school. Our mothers didn't seem to worry or be aware of the possible dangers. Were they the equivalent of today's apparently careless mothers? These days they don't even allow infants out of the classroom on their own.

Bothiegran2013 Thu 04-Aug-16 18:06:14

Not only do they not talk to their kids, they don't actually get down on the floor and play with them. When my GS is visiting us or we visit them, we spend most of our time playing with him. The TV is on the whole time, drives us mad, I try and make a rule that it is not on in our house.

teabag Thu 04-Aug-16 16:29:52

There is a new cocktail bar in Hove that was on the news recently which uses a Faraday cage to block Mobile phone signals.

The owner said he wanted to force "people to interact in the real world" and remember how to socialise. Force is may be a bit strong but he does have a point. Nothing worse than trying to have a conversation with people who are constantly either checking or answering their mobiles. For me it is sheer bad manners but sadly the norm today.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-sussex-36943686