It’s the Great Portland Pancake Scandal.
I am about to make myself really, really unpopular. Because today, I defended a woman who yelled at a two-year-old.
This morning when we were discussing a news story in which a Portland restaurant owner screamed at a toddler… who had in turn been screaming for a good 40 minutes.
“No one would ever scream at a baby, right?” declared one of the team.
“How could anyone yell at a toddler?” piped up another.
“I would never do that!” declared the last.
I squirmed a bit and looked furtively around and then thought – f*ck it. I’m going in.
“I would.” I said boldly. “I would totally yell at a screaming child.”
Well, shocked silence and widened eyes aside, we all had a bit of a laugh and moved on. But the question lingered: Is it ever OK to yell at someone else’s child?
Whole books have been written on the topic, with Christos Tsiolkas’s The Slap sparking heated debate among parents and childless folk alike. But let’s start with a few home truths from the Portland incident, shall we?
Here’s a play-by-play.
1. Parents bring 2 year old child to a busy Portland diner.
2. Parents buy delicious pancakes.
3. Parents place delicious pancakes out of reach of their 2 year old child.
4. Child begins screaming.
5. Child screams for FORTY MINUTES. FORTY.
6. Diner owner slams her hands on the bench, points to child, and shouts – “This has to stop!”
Top Comments
Some parents simply have no clue.
Or don't care how annoying their child is.
I had coffee with a friend yesterday and there were many empty tables but the 2 mums with the 3 noisy toddlers decided the ones right next to us was perfect.
So I have a child bouncing and jumping on the bench seat we were sharing jolting me with each move. Not once did either mum stop the child.
We ended up leaving because I was about to scream at the child and it was so noisy we could hardly hear each other.
Neither parent batted an eyelid.
So yes if the parent doesn't care or realise how annoying their child's behaviour is in public they need to be prepared for others to step in.
I definitely agree the owner had the right to yell at the screaming child. After 40 minutes, heck, even 20 minutes of hearing that with no action taken from the parents, I would have walked right up to the table and said my peace, whether I was the owner or a fellow patron. My parents would have never put up with this commotion when I was a child and I feel some parents these days do not bother to discipline and teach their child how to behave properly in public these days. Welcome to the self-entitlement era.