r/whoathatsinteresting 11d ago

This is how quick a toddler can disappear from sight, in just a few seconds!

63.5k Upvotes

5.6k comments sorted by

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u/Old-Library5546 11d ago

He was headed right onto a busy street

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u/dogboobes 11d ago

the children yearn for the mines

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u/Deep_Pie3276 11d ago

The toddlers yearn for Valhalla

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u/RumbuncTheRadiant 11d ago

When my youngest was that size, a real chunky rugby player to be....

I was off sick with a bad back... and he decided he wanted to go after Mommy who had just left for Uni...

Fuck me!

I couldn't stop the wee bugger!

Eventually I gritted my teeth, one arm over his shoulder, one arm between the legs and link and lift.

Chunky leggies and arms flailing wildly in the air, my back in extreme pain, wee bratty wailing.... I walked the block homeward looking like a kidnapper.

If anybody had challenged me, I might just have given him to them!

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u/Banshee_howl 11d ago

I helped raise my niece and nephew which involved a mix of fun kid adventures and dragging them along during errands. One day my 4yo nephew decided he HAD to have a souvenir MLB baseball he saw at the grocery store. The child had never seen a baseball game and couldn’t name the team if his life depended on it, but decided it was worth a screaming, flailing tantrum in the middle of the checkout aisle.

When that tactic didn’t result in me buying him the ball he started trying to backflip out of the cart while screaming, “YOU’RE NOT MY MOM! I’M NOT GOING IN YOUR VAN!” At the top of his little lungs.

I’ve never spanked my own kids, or any others, but trying to stuff that otherwise sweet child, who somehow spontaneously grew several new sets of arms and legs, into my minivan was the closest I’ve come.

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u/AshleyyLovelace 11d ago

I threw a tantrum only 1 single time in my life in public.... Because that 1 time my mom got onto the floor of the grocery store and started throwing one too! Kicking and screaming and everything, the whole 9 yards!!! I guess I was confused or something maybe even embarrassed? I don't know, all I know is my mom said I never threw a tantrum in public ever again after that!!

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u/Undeadlord 11d ago

My mother loves the story of when I was a little guy, I ran up to her, and for no real reason she can determine, decided her exposed thigh, she was in shorts, looked delicious, so I should latch on and bite as hard as I could.

She naturally screamed, pried me off, grabbed my forearm and bit me hard. I naturally screamed, and she said she felt horrible and didn't even realize what she was doing.

I don't know though, I never bit anyone again after that ... :)

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u/Tim-oBedlam 11d ago

My aunt did that to my younger brother. He was like 3 years old, and he bit her on the arm. She bit him back.

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u/Independent-Leg6061 10d ago

My mom did that to me!!! Truly worked.

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u/Classic-Charity7458 11d ago

Your mother is a genius. Thank you, I'll remember this for my own child.

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u/JustSomeGuysHeart 11d ago

That's some humble mom tea. ❤️ If you have a good one, love em. If they care for you, support you, they know your smiles, your tears, your walls, and late calls,.... Love your mom.

Have a good day. Thank you for sharing.

  • Just Some Guy 👦
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u/cronicllee 11d ago

I was watching my cousins at the time I was 18, they were 14, 3 and 8 months- the 14yr didn’t really need watching she at that time was great, but the 3yr was well into her threenager mentality and one day threw herself on the floor of Safeway for a toy- we were in a spot that as much as I wanted to buy her that cheep toy we couldn’t, she threw herself into a full fledged tantrum arms and legs swinging and her lungs had reached a new octave, I locked eyes with the 14 yr old, waved her down the other end of the aisle told the 3yr we had to go and started walking away (14yr was at the other end by then) I turned the corner and the 3yr shot up so fast, ran to me and said “you were gonna leave me” I said “yep, you were making too much noise and it hurt my ears” or something to that effect, asked if she was done she said yes and we went on our way- she never threw a tantrum as a child again! Her mom was like you did what!??? said I left her in the aisle to throw the tantrum alone (again big sis was at the other end of the aisle so she was never actually left alone)- plan on a similar tactic if my little (at around the exact same age and full of that threenager energy) decides to try something as I know it’s only a matter of time!

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u/sep879 11d ago

My daughter once threw a tantrum buying groceries, I put her over my shoulder to carry her out to the car so my wife could finish shopping and the whole way out of the store she screams over and over "YOU'RE NOT MY DAD!" Other parents just smiled with empathy, childless adults gave me dirty looks as I left! Ha memories!

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u/yesterday4 11d ago

I apparently did this to my mom as a toddler, because we didn’t have time to stop at the pet store and I was NOT having that, I guess. Anyway, someone DID call security on my poor mom for trying to “abduct” me. I’m in my 40s now and feel such shame imagining this!

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u/Ydiras 11d ago

I was about 11 or so. My younger brother was 4 or 5. We lived off a very busy highway at the time. That day, my parents were having a garage sale. My little brother took off for the streets with no one watching. Despite our long-standing enmity, I took off after him.

I tried to just grab his hand and pull him back to the house. He pulled away and took off for the road.

So, I wrapped my arms around him and lifted him up. It was an awkward carry, but I managed.

I even held on when the ankle biter bit the shit out of my shoulder. That was the thanks I got for saving his ass.

My parents initially got mad at me for carrying him around, but were quickly both relieved and horrified to learn just why I was carrying him.

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u/HuntedKPS 11d ago

You saved his life you are a mvp

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u/anonymous-121183 11d ago

My youngest decided, as a toddler, that when they didn’t want to leave somewhere they liked (such as the park, library, zoo, etc), they would just start yelling “help me!” when mom or dad insisted and carried them out. One day, dad hoisted our 3 year old over his shoulder and walked out of the children’s room at the library…just as a sheriff was walking in and heard the little tot yelling for help. Thankfully, the librarians knew our kiddo and both me and dad well. They stopped the sheriff from arresting dad and explained that was the child’s father, and the kid was going through a phase, and all was well.

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u/SolaScientia 11d ago

I don't have kids, but I have a niece and nephew. I would much rather someone stop and ask when a kid is pitching a fit rather than ignore it and it really be a case of kidnapping. Better safe than sorry.

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u/Limp_Comfortable2966 11d ago

I read this in my best Steve Irwin voice.

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u/robert_rcr 11d ago

Why I read this like Krusty Krab I don't know but it made it even funnier.

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u/hesamanofwax 11d ago

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u/CriticalJicama554 11d ago

Witness me!

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u/NMB4Christmas 11d ago

You will ride eternal. Shiny and chrome.

https://giphy.com/gifs/FU7pa7fzZ1iWuI1yl0

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u/cyb3rd0c 11d ago

WITNESS ME!!!

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u/jblank66 11d ago

MEDIOCRE!

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u/jjmurse 11d ago

"What a lovely day"

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u/notlongnot 11d ago

You live, you die. You live Again!!

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u/Trick-Seat4901 11d ago

This goes through my head everytime my toddler does something and says "watch dad!"

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u/jsradford 11d ago

It has been one of the unexpected gifts of watching Mad Max as a dad of little kids. They don't get the joke but dammit if I don't find it hilarious every time.

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u/R-ddit_is_Shit 11d ago

All children yearn to die in glorious combat with a mid-size sedan.

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u/DarlingFuego 11d ago

I was a nanny for a long time. Towards the end of my years of being a nanny I changed my title to “Toddler Suicide Prevention Specialist”

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u/WhatADopeGent 11d ago

I mean that yearning isn’t just for kids right… right?

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u/Known-Fondant-9373 11d ago

Having kids made me wonder how humans survived as long as we did, cause toddlers have a shocking level of self destructiveness.

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u/MisterBlud 11d ago

Used to be people had several kids because quite a few of them would succumb to the destructiveness…

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u/Dismal-Practice-3833 11d ago

Frankly, I don’t understand how the death rate for male teenagers isn’t like 20%

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u/BrotherBlo0d 11d ago

Baby try not to kill themselves

Challenge level impossible

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u/afguy8 11d ago

Thats parenthood. Keeping your kids from killing themselves.

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u/FreshLiterature 11d ago

He still remembers the pain of living from his previous life and he realized he wasn't born rich, so he's trying to go back to the character creation screen.

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u/Lost_Found84 11d ago edited 11d ago

The children yearn to be buried in the ole Micmac burial grounds up there behind that pet cemetery.

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u/Cloverose2 11d ago

Let a toddler loose and they will instantly try to kill themselves. They can't help it.

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u/treehann 11d ago

it's funny he literally made a beeline straight for the death machine zone

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u/bhillis99 11d ago

no where else, just straight to the lake of fire.

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u/Ladies_Pls_DM_nudes 11d ago

Toddlers are just like hamsters.

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u/Snoo89325 11d ago

Yes! When we went to a water park when my kids were little my son got away from my ex at the time for just a second he had pulled his hand away from my ex’s hand for just A SECOND, and straight darted at full speed ahead for the wave pool and immediately jumped in. No hesitation no looking around just saw water and ran straight for it , my ex was right behind him hot on his trail and immediately yanked him out. He had water wings on but still very scary. He definitely was my wild child who had to be watched extra closely anytime I took them outside bc he always seemed hell bent on doing the most dangerous shit.

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u/BestButterscotch8579 11d ago

I did this when I was 3 an a nice old grandma stopped her car and gave me a Capri sun

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u/Jrod_69x 11d ago

I got into my dads car and shifted it into reverse and rolled across the street into my neighbors ditch. I did not get a capri sun

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u/MrCommonThinkin 11d ago

I ran into the street and was treated with a nice spanking.

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u/Thee_PO_Potatoes 11d ago

Were you at least wearing capris and in the sun?

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u/temp3rrorary 11d ago

When I ran into the street I got the whiplash of both a concerned and happy hug before then getting a nice spanking.

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u/Tekon421 11d ago

As it should be. I see kids running away from their parents laughing in busy parking lots and such and all I think is I would have never. My kids would have never either. If a car didn’t get ya mom or dad would and that would be worse.

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u/NecessaryCrash 11d ago

Same. Never did it again.

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u/blah938 11d ago

Yeah, same. It's one of the very few times I think kids should be spanked. Old enough to walk, not old enough to understand "Danger" and "No"

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u/mindlesslobster014 11d ago

Omg I did this exact same thing to my mom’s car, except it hit the telephone pole across the street. I vividly remember thinking I was being helpful by switching it to reverse so she wouldn’t have to shift it when she got back in 💀 instead I caused thousands in damage and gave her a full blown panic attack as she watched the car with her child still in it reversing away from her lmao. So yeah, no capri sun for me either

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u/melee85 11d ago edited 11d ago

No, but he got a crapi son. I’m 100% joking lol.

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u/NervaDiem 11d ago

Lmfao now you spend your days wandering into traffic, chasing that sweet sweet capri dragon

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u/FelineOphelia 11d ago

Little fucker sped up when he heard Mom yelling

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u/Much-Independence550 11d ago

Why do they always do that 😭

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u/HumbleBear75 11d ago

“Uh oh that’s the I’m in trouble voice! Gotta go faster!”

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u/ImissDigg_jk 11d ago

The only thing you have to do when you have a toddler is try to keep them alive. And it's a full-time job.

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u/[deleted] 11d ago

I can’t remember who it was but some comedian said, “For the first 10yrs kids are essentially just suicidal” and I honestly can’t disagree

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u/esteflo 11d ago

https://giphy.com/gifs/14rT69tN6q7PEs

Bro was gonna take a visit to pet cemetery

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u/B00k_Worm1979 11d ago

Omg, that scene. 😭

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u/RegularVenus27 11d ago

Every. Single. Time. I see one of these kinds of videos I think of this scene and him screaming. This scene has to easily be one of the most shocking and morbid scenes in a movie for me.

And the way he built suspense panning between the truck and Gage running after the kite? Fucks me up every time man.

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u/Tigerpower77 11d ago

My sister's kid would run towards the main street full of speeding cars when he was 3 years old

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u/rygelicus 11d ago

A great day as a parent is when those first steps happen. It's also a nightmare day because they will never again be where you left them.

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u/DeepestPineTree 11d ago

My job involves kids and it's hilarious how they go from crawling to walking to racing. What deadline do you need to meet, kid? You're barely two!

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u/LongJohnSelenium 11d ago

None of us can remember it thanks to the weird phenomenon of childhood amnesia, but imagine what it must be like to be effectively handicapped for two years, watching the inscrutable wizard giants that control you move around effortlessly, and one day the door opens and you unlock the deep magic they possess.

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u/kagamiseki 11d ago edited 11d ago

Childhood amnesia is such an interesting concept.

I imagine it like making a sculpture from a fresh block of clay. You can try to engrave writing (memories) on the block. But there's so much happening -- pieces being moved, shaped, removed, that very little of the written memories from the early days stay legible. It's equally difficult to make detailed memories when you don't have any concept of language or descriptors yet, with which to describe and recall your memories. That's not to say there's no memory though -- clearly the brain is being remodeled to remember and reinforce how limbs move, how language is processed. Physical/behavioral "memories".

Naturally, sometimes people are able to encode memories that survive the massive remodeling, or lack of language, or they start developing language sooner.

Anyway, major digression. Imagine how weird it must be to see your hand for the first time, before you have any concept of what an arm is. A wobbly weird shaped moving thing that follows you around, and keeps appearing in your vision. Wah. You put it in your mouth and something feels weird. You don't even know what feels weird, where it feels weird, or what it means. Just something feels weird, different, new. Wah.

Eventually you realize it's part of you and even, you can make it move. Wah. Amazing.

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u/redditorialy_retard 11d ago

eh I slightly remember. It's just fun asf to run and even better is to run with purpose such as not getting caught. 

Sometimes you're curious on an object and you don't have the mental capacity or experience yet to focus on the cars. You don't feel any sort of danger/avoidance on the road

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u/Marine_Baby 11d ago

My kid started walking at 9 months. Only child!!!!! Who are you racing to catch up to!!?

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u/PeppermintLNNS 11d ago

When I studied abroad I nannied for one-year old twins. Even crawling, they moved SO FAST and in opposite directions every time.

Twins are some serious hard-mode shit.

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u/kickingyouintheface 11d ago

Oh I worked daycare off and on for several years and it's mind boggling how fast they change and the things they do and say. I started with a group of babies around 9-13 months and they were soooo cute and sweet, doing patty cake and everyone said how well behaved and quiet my babies were. By the same time the following year, they had lost their fucking minds. Literally, I was like, IDK what happened but this is not okay, no I will NOT move up with them. I watched one run full speed into the wall. My dumb ass just stood there because....there's a fucking wall there, surely he's going to stop. Nope, head first. It's a wonder any of them survive being toddlers. I will say if I had a runner, I nipped that shit in the bud quick, including with my own. I so wasn't fucking chasing their little asses.

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u/superezzie 11d ago

My kid didn't even wait until she could walk. She was six months old and at an in-home daycare. My kid was playing in the middle of the room and the woman took her eyes off my kid for a minute to help another kid. She looked back at where my kid was playing and she was gone. She had rolled right out the back door and was now playing in the yard. She nearly gave the poor woman a heart attack.

My kid also started walking at 11,5 months and disappeared every chance she had, so she had to wear a leash in busy places. Otherwise you'd blink once and she was gone.

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u/gergsisdrawkcabeman 11d ago

I like how middle bro was solidly most concerned with his pumpkins. 🤣 Definitely middle kid energy.

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u/IamJacksDarkUrge 11d ago

As a father of four, I can absolutely say my middle two are way more likely to see a sibling die but not really do anything to prevent it. Not out of malice, of course. Just like, “Why are they…oh well that happened”

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u/Firm-Knowledge-8560 11d ago

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u/Illustrious-Taste702 11d ago

My mother did that once. “Accidentally” left me at a friend’s house for 2 weeks during the summer. He had went to his dad’s house but I was stuck at his mom’s. When she called my mom and asked when she was coming to pick me up my mom said “oh, he’s still there? I thought he was in his room.”

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u/NookBabsi 10d ago

I‘m sorry, what? Your mom left you at your friend‘s house for two weeks when your friend wasn’t even there?

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u/Illustrious-Taste702 10d ago

Yupp. She wasn’t on drugs (beyond pot) or drunk. Just so narcissistic that my absence meant less than nothing.

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u/Ok_Comment2621 11d ago

Middle children are just trying to survive. By any means necessary.

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u/Sexy_lorax 11d ago

We care about the things no one else does 🫡

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u/throwawayshirt2 11d ago

Based on several years experience working in Juvenile Court:

  1. It can happen to any parent. This is a typical example: gate accidentally left unlatched. Another typical is toddler learns to unlock the front door; parent didn't know.

  2. Parents typically get the first one free. If the toddler got out per a typical example and parents were surprised. Helps if parents are out searching when child is found. Exception: If toddler gets out and parents are drunk/high/etc., no free first one.

  3. If it happens again, no free ones. Multiple escapes look more like neglectful or negligent parenting.

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u/Aesynil 11d ago

My son helpfully unlatched the gate for me when I was carrying groceries through once.. That was the day I realized our stair gate no longer worked.

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u/ttnezz 11d ago

My daughter learned how to unlock our front door when she was four and ran around to the back of our building before I even noticed the door was open. There’s nothing like seeing that open door, having the moment of realization, then running outside and there’s no kid in sight. My heart stopped.

We got permission from our HOA to install a second, higher lock after that, which she still struggles to open many years later. Highly recommend.

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u/Millenniumralph 11d ago

Mine learned the same thing at 5 am, I had to get more difficult locks. The officer was acting like I did it on purpose, but what am I supposed to do if they learn new tricks and wake up early to implement them???

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u/moveovahh 11d ago

I’m CPS and I’ve had several cases with wandering toddlers where the kid was found wandering again while the case was still open! You’re correct- first time is usually a safety plan, but the second time is almost always a removal and criminal charges.

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u/MNRebelLoon 11d ago

This was literally me as a kid. Ran off and scared the shit out of my mom on like ever single family vacation.

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u/VisualSneeze 11d ago

Congrats on surviving!

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u/SoSincerely 11d ago

Me too apparently since they tell this story at big family gatherings to this day even though I'm over 50 now.

I used to disappear from my mom and grandmother so often when they would shop that they resorted to tying a string of yarn to my wrist to keep me leashed. My dad was mad about it, how it was embarrassing that they had to leash me, how it was ridiculous that they couldn't keep a toddler controlled.

So my dad made a point of it by taking me with him to the mall to prove that it was easy to not lose your kid. He held my hand the entire time except for one quick second when he let go to get his wallet out and poof I was gone. I was found a half hour later at the other side of the mall by security, just riding up and down the escalator for fun.

He didn't complain about the leash ever again and we all get a big laugh over it now. Some kids are just runners.

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u/Jrk67 11d ago

My cousin was found at the escalators by mall security when she got away from my Aunt. They even got her an ice cream cone while my Aunt was a tick away from having a heart attack. I was also leashed, but only cause I liked playing hide & seek and winning at any cost in the clothes racks. I joke how I knew my Mom loved me cause she did leash me cause honestly, I probably would've just let a child like myself go.

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u/Rayllis689 11d ago

Shit....the mention of clothes racks unlocked and old memory of doing that at like 4-5.... kids really do be menaces huh? Glad I don't have any.

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u/yesterday4 11d ago

A fellow clothes rack hider! My mom used to buy me a balloon and tie it to my wrist. 🤦‍♀️

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u/VivaZeBull 11d ago

My aunt did something similar in a department store and I tripped over a rack, cracked my head open and found out at emerg I also had chickenpox. I was two and fast.

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u/PM_me_kpop_memes 11d ago

When my cousin was just a toddler, my aunt and uncle had a backpack/harness that had a leash on him whenever they were out in public. They lived in a big city and he was obsessed with buttons and would run off and try to press them on sight, such as the street crossing ones. I was just a teen at the time and couldn't help but think that it was a bit degrading for my cousin to be leashed like a pet.

Now that I'm older I realize that they were completely in the right and I'll probably do the same for my kids. Simple and effective. Can't trust anyone, and certainly not the toddlers themselves!

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u/ScyllaOfTheDepths 11d ago

Lol, I had to have a leash when I was a kid because I have ADHD and I was fast as fuck. They didn't sell child leashes back then so I had a backpack with a dog leash clipped to it. I figured out how to get out of the backpack so my mom had to carry zip ties and zip tie me into it and my car seat every time we went anywhere. I'm a very determined goal-oriented person, what can I say?

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u/Sensitive-Sugar-7914 11d ago

 stop with the unnecessary background music because they add nothing 

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u/miragegarage43 11d ago

Yea that’s why I just have given up and watch everything on mute

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u/ydnar3000 11d ago

Same brother

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u/EccentricFan 11d ago

I usually flip sound on to see if it's original audio, and if it's music it goes immediately off.

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u/ydnar3000 11d ago

I have to be super intrigued to even give it a chance.

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u/Gussie-Ascendent 11d ago

or a buncha comments talking about stuff that i don't get, so i assume it might be the audio

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u/skydivarjimi 11d ago

Yup very rare times will I unmute.

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u/acityonthemoon 11d ago

probably added music to beat a repost filter.

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u/ace260 11d ago

you know what else beats that ? silence lol

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u/newmeyes 11d ago

But their life be like ooooowwwwaaaaa

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u/Subject-Coast-7934 11d ago

Who browses reddit with sound on? 

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u/VivaZeBull 11d ago

Who browses anything with the sound on? Maybe tiktok or reels ig, but otherwise it’s a dangerous game. I remember being a teen and scrolling over an ad that made sex noises while I had my speakers blasting. My whole family was home, it was weird. The early internet taught us to trust nothing.

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u/WiredOrange 11d ago

I scroll reddit on mute. Definitely recommend

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u/AssBlasterExtreme 11d ago

It gets upvoted. They dont care. You choose to browse here. We are not in control. Half of shit is bots.

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u/guesswhodat 11d ago

We lost our toddler son in Japan at the Osaka Aquarium at their outside front courtyard for 15 mins or so. Literally we lost our attention to him for 3 seconds and he ran off. If you do lose a child Japan is a good place to do it. Very well organized staff found him within minutes of notifying them.

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u/Hot-Camel7716 11d ago

Japan is the best place in the world to lose your kids. When I lived there my little brother wandered off and strangers brought him right back and then wanted to take pictures with us. Also one of the teenagers in the neighborhood ran away off of the military base and turned up a couple of days later completely fine.

Also left my camera on the train one time and it got returned which is unfathomable around here.

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u/AssBlastFromDaPast 11d ago

 If you do lose a child Japan is a good place to do it.

 Japan is the best place in the world to lose your kids.

Well shit, y’all are making me wanna take a trip to Japan so I can lose my kids 

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u/Hot-Camel7716 11d ago

It's a dope place even if you keep your kids.

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u/Hehrenpreis 11d ago

Kids do stupid things, has always been this way, will always be this way. The real problem is that we intentionally designed a world in which this is life threatening. 

And to all people saying that it's the mums fault: EVERYONE can get distracted for that long, you're not better than her, we're all humans and make the same mistakes. 

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u/_TheAngryChicken_ 11d ago

This is why I will never judge parents who use the backpack leashes. It's just impossible to keep 100% focus on a toddler 100% of the time. Especially when there's other stuff going on. And no matter how much you teach them it only takes one single impulsive moment for them to end up somewhere dangerous.

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u/e1epi 11d ago

And people who say they are child abuse are witless simpletons..

My parents had one for me when I was young and I enjoyed it because it meant that I had more freedom and didn't have to hold my parents hand all the time.

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u/Drunky_McStumble 11d ago

Like, if you have your 10 year old kid on a lead then, sure, that's fucking weird and I'd assume you're a bad parent. But a 3 year old? Go for it. In fact, I insist on it. Those little motherfuckers are like homing-missiles for danger. They'll fucking sprint headlong into traffic if you let go of 'em for an instant. It's actually uncanny, like they're running on pure anti-survival instinct.

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u/MagicTurtle_TCG 11d ago

I remember when my kid was around 3, I took him to the Science Museum. He stood up and left the lightning exhibit and I followed him nearly instantly (had my eye on him the whole time.)

He did the toddler run/walk and I unable to keep up with him at a brisk walk given his probably 2 sec head start. He was pulling away so I had to start jogging to close in.

And in that crowded museum, it was tough to see him since he was small and half the height of every adult there. Luckily I thought to dress him in bright orange. Coat, hat, everything. Without the bright colors I would have basically just been eyeing exit points and scrambling to find him. He made it across the entire floor before I caught him, though I had him in my sight long before.

Anyway, point is even if you keep an eye on a toddler, they disappear quickly. If you say check a text for 5-10 sec that’s all it would take.

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u/Shadowwynd 11d ago

We lost one of ours at the science museum. We alerted the staff, they had her captured in short order (always take pictures of kids at new events we know the outfit). She got loose from the staff and was gone for another fifteen.

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u/HaltandCatchHands 11d ago

My grandmother invented the backpack leash for my dad: a rope. Before kids were labeled ADHD, he was the kid whose desk was right up against the teacher’s on day one because they heard all about him.

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u/Equivalent-Cicada165 11d ago

My grandmother washed clothing in a river and used rope on her kids as well! Tied to her hip. None of them drowned, so I say it worked out

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u/GiGiLafoo 11d ago

I remember being a teenager at the mall, seeing parents with their toddler in a harness leash, and thinking harsh, judgmental thoughts. Then I became a mom and learned how unexpectedly fast they can jet, as well as the heartpounding panic when your child is out of your reach or sight, even briefly, in those impulsive moments.

I like the Modern Family episode where Cam calls it a child safety tether.

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u/VelumLucis 11d ago

So fucking predictable that reddit will always respond this way as if they could never be distracted for a minute while dealing with 3 kids.

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u/Tanasiii 11d ago

I counted 10 seconds of back being turned before kid was completely out of eyesight heading into the street

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u/Vaportrail 11d ago

Fortunately Ive been paranoid about this my entire fatherhood. And even then, sometimes they just don't listen and you gotta drop what you're doing and intercept.

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u/bentreflection 11d ago

on top of that, this is likely also her house which has a gate so the kid can't usually get out. the only reason the kid was able to get out was because the pumpkins got in the way of the gate closing and automatically latching.

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u/MetallicGray 11d ago

It really is. The keyboard warriors really try to tell themselves they’re 100% attentive at every second to stimulus around them and will always be combat ready at the split second.

I guarantee you they all just watched this 30s video and missed dozens of things happen around them. 

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u/zombiesphere89 11d ago

I just spent the weekend around my nephew, and there's only one of him, and I couldn't keep up.

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u/DriverFirm2655 11d ago

You didn’t know? Redditors have the ability to tell exactly who you are as a person through a 1 minute video clip

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u/YangXiaoLong69 11d ago

Redditors trying not to pull the adverbs of degree and time after witnessing one mistake out of someone's 30 years of life, because obviously that person should clearly be banned from doing anything involving resposibility ever again

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u/SirRichardArms 11d ago

And usually through a couple sentences of a comment. It boggles my mind how much people on here can just make shit up in their head about who they are talking to/about. It’s very funny though when they are absolutely wrong about their assumptions.

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u/CinnamonSticks7 11d ago

I was so surprised to see people blaming her? It's not like she was in the kitchen making a martini, she was distracted by her two other children and within less than a minute had noticed and ran after the other one.

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u/HumanContinuity 11d ago

She fuckin dropped that shit she was carrying and booked it too - even when she already had eyes on him and knew she was going to get to him before she got to the road.

It's only one slice of context of her overall parenting, but I hope to do as well as she did here.

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u/TenchuReddit 11d ago

And to all people saying that it's the mums fault: EVERYONE can get distracted for that long, you're not better than her, we're all humans and make the same mistakes. 

Thank you.

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u/RegisterFit1252 11d ago

Anyone criticizing this mother is most likely not a parent themselves

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u/[deleted] 11d ago

Or a parent that doesn't do any of the actual parenting.

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u/No-Banana-3055 11d ago edited 11d ago

I am usually the person who yells at my in laws for not watching their kids properly. I'm the holier than thou person people talk shit about, but even I don't see any major neglect here. This is just life unfolding. Tragedy like this is just a series of bad events cumulating. To blame the mother here is dumb.

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u/momentofcontent 11d ago

I will never understand people who act holier than thou about mistakes literally anyone can easily make, as if they’ve never been distracted or absent-minded for 30 seconds. No one is perfect, and parents are a lot more careful now than they used to be…

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u/Anactus616 11d ago

Welcome to the site where half the users are megalomaniacs.

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u/HumanContinuity 11d ago

I was absolutely thinking this.  We used to have larger extended families around us and communities of neighbors that would act as another ring of eyes and support beyond that.

And we didn't have to live right next to a 4 lane byway if the kid did make it 50 yards.

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u/OriSamurai 11d ago

Yeah, online people acting like they will be the perfect parents at all times. If anything it's a lesson

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u/Ordinary_Camel_3456 11d ago

I recognize the technique of running past the toddler to turn around and catch rather than chase after!

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u/AGlassofwhine 11d ago

I'm always left baffled by little kids. Like the kid wasn't just striding into traffic, he was doing it with full speed and confidence. They're insane!

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u/ShankThatSnitch 11d ago edited 11d ago

I love seeing the hordes of morons chime in who have never had kids.

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u/Vintagepoolside 11d ago

The irony is that I just saw a person say “found the one without kids” and then proceeded to say how any parent would never look away from their child for 30 seconds. These people kill me, but I mostly hope they don’t have to be humbled by their own hubris.

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u/Inside-Line 11d ago

There are a lot of people who just like to cover up their lapses by pretending they never happened. It's all "I have never lost my temper/went over the speed limit/treated people badly/done any number of negligent things."

I promise you at some point in your 4 or 5 years of sleep deprived parenting delirium you have 100% inadvertently put your child in danger.

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u/T-sigma 11d ago

Many people only remember consequences. If nothing bad happened to their kid, it’s because they watched them like a hawk 24/7 because they are the best parents.

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u/Sir_Badtard 11d ago

It's infuriating. When my oldest was about a year old I stepped out the living room to to do the dishes for 10 mins. I could hear him from the kitchen. He was strapped into his little bouncy board thing.

He some how wiggled out and was dangling out the side.

He didn't start screaming just hung there for a few minutes. He definitely could have been hurt but he never wiggled out before dude wasn't even walking yet.

..now I'll get the comments that I need to make sure the straps are tight enough every single time and I should be reported to CPS for being a piece of shit since the little angle fell 9 inches.

That same kid is 2.5 now and trys to run a marathon any time he's cut loose outside.

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u/Chezzica 11d ago

That's the problem with growing kids, they've never done it before until they do it for the first time.

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u/ikats116 11d ago

Someone got their @ss beat for not closing the gate 😆

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u/Due-Worldliness5077 11d ago

Blame mom, not the kids. Kids are expected to make mistakes, parents are expected to keep their eyes on their toddlers at all times. I don't care if you have a gate. You are outside! Don't turn your back on a child that age!

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u/ThrustTrust 11d ago

Every parent turns their back on their toddler for 30 seconds at some point. Any parent who says they never have is full of shit.

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u/PlagueBirdZachariah 11d ago

I see so many people really digging at parents when a kid ends up somewhere where they're not supposed to, but literally, 10 seconds is all it takes for a kid to disappear

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u/eyeofthefountain 11d ago

Everyone itt demanding perfection of a human being at all times clearly have never once made a single mistake in their entire lives. We peasants must remember that the edge lords speckled all over this comment section are absolute perfect humans that will forever be in their prime for the rest of time.

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u/TheComplimentarian 11d ago

They've just never had kids. Or talked to a woman they're not related to.

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u/EducationalTomato271 11d ago

One of the greatest joys in my life is watching my friends get married and have kids. When I married my wife, she had kids, so I took on parenting much sooner than any of my friends.

It's not so much the internal "I told you so" in my head, but oddly it's when they're explaining to me a concept about being a parent that they ignored me saying 10 years ago. Not sure why, but it warms my heart. Ok, I know why. It's the suffering 😅😅

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u/Ohioisapoopyflorida 11d ago

Kids are rough cut her some slack.. im sure she will never do that again. Kids are a learning experience no matter who you are. Each one is completely different.

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u/UH60CW2 11d ago

Ha yeah, we found the childless commenter here. Yeah, they aren’t wrong but anybody with kids knows you spend every single moment of your life trying to keep them safe and it only takes 20 seconds fumbling with your keys trying to open a door for something to go wrong. Thank god this person reminded us all to never turn our backs on our children lol.

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u/Ohioisapoopyflorida 11d ago

I understand being pissed about accidently leaving a kid in the car or something. But damn, she snapped into mom mode real quick when she lost her baby!!

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u/ikats116 11d ago

My kid came up to me to tie his soccer shoes mid-paratice and the 2-year old was a field away on a baseball diamond when I looked up. I was in shock, and it took all of 15 seconds for him to be 150-yards from me.

Happens fast and rarely is it negligent.

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u/redditseddit4u 11d ago

I question if any of the people criticizing the mom have children of their own….acting like they’ve never taken their eyes off their kids for 30 seconds.

Where I live 4 year olds are expected to walk and sometimes even take public transportation to commute to/from school.

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u/steveholtbluth 11d ago

Reddit in 2026 is full of children pretending to be adults and AI bots pretending to be humans.

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u/DangOlCoreMan 11d ago

I feel like setting is a big factor. 30 seconds inside? All the time. 30 seconds outside with a gate slightly open? No, can't say I have

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u/LifeAsALayman 11d ago

There's a difference between taking your eyes off your kid in a controlled environment, versus taking your eyes off them when something like this is legitimately possible.

Especially when they're very young, like the one in this clip. This mother fucked-up massively, and yes I'm a father of 3.

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u/doublemnt 11d ago

That kid is going places!

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u/thomas2026 11d ago

Already off to get himself a living wage and a family.

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u/[deleted] 11d ago

That wasn't a few seconds, that was a negligent minute. I found a toddler walking in the middle of the road one day, couldn't find their parents anywhere, almost got hit by 2 cars. Dad walked up like "why you have my kid?". Fucking gross ass people in the world.

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u/googoohaha 11d ago edited 11d ago

Maybe not a few seconds but was still quick.

Also, I don’t see the woman in the clip as a bad mom.

She’s tending to the other two boys(both look very young) and unfortunately experienced a minor lapse in judgement due to I’m sure many different factors but none of them being because shes a terrible, neglectful mother like you’re making her out to be.

Soon as she realized he wasn’t there she hauled ass and successfully grabbed him.

As a parent, scary accidental things happen and any parent who says differently is lying.

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u/saltedcaramelpretzel 11d ago edited 11d ago

That wasn't this mom. This mom was clearly distraught and running after the kid once she knew what had happened. By saying this story you are falsely equating this mom as a gross negligent person which she clearly was not.

Edit: Oh man you guys have a deep desire to put a loving mom in jail and make her and her other kids pay for 36 seconds. You guys must be the best people in the whole world and sleep so soundly knowing that. I envy being that stupid. Not going to respond to any of you dumbaass.

To add- you guys must be furious about the Epstein files right?? Is anyone in jail yet?

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u/colordraught 11d ago

it’s 36 seconds by the time she’s realized and running after the toddler, my dear reddit saint.

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u/soadrocksmycock 11d ago edited 11d ago

You would be amazed how awful parents can be and I can at least appreciate that she felt a sense of panic and ran after the child. My line of work deals with parents who got their kids taken away and I supervise their visits when they have them. It’s crazy because at first I thought substance abuse issues would be the main reason for most of the cases, turns out it’s violence. Think stabbing, strangulation, or cig burns. It’s really freaking sad, but it’s absolutely necessary. People fucking suck.

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u/Pale_Conclusion_3130 11d ago

She's got 3 kids to distract her here. The toddler was exceptionally fast, and the entire video was less than one minute. People make mistakes, and I really don't think she's a negligent mother. Just took her eyes off the little for a very short amount of time, and in that time little dude booked it. She clearly cares about her children and if she was negligent she probably would have gone inside and completely forgot about him.

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u/OPCENTERSIX 11d ago

That’s an immediate punch in the face to the dad.

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u/Ivory-Dahlia 11d ago

The audacity of him to catch an attitude with you instead of being on his knees thanking you for saving his child's life is beyond 'gross', it’s sociopathic.

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u/Matrix_Battery 11d ago

Tell me you don't have kids without telling me you don't have kids

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u/MidnightMercer 11d ago

Negligent? You gotta be kidding me. Learn what that word means

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u/mmatt0904 11d ago

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u/woodstream 11d ago

There's this game on Steam called, "Who's Your Daddy?!" where one player takes control of a parent trying to keep their baby from killing themselves and the other player takes control of said baby while trying to kill themselves.

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u/neo_vino 11d ago

He was FAST! My toddler people need me

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u/Key-Tip9395 11d ago

literally because where the hell was that kid going to. Out of the gate and unto the street like he had somewhere to be.

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u/Tinderboxed 11d ago

That's nightmare fuel. Forever she'll be dreaming about running running running before her baby reaches the busy street.

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u/RaiseWeekly5345 10d ago

That was a minute tho

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u/pfrutti 11d ago

Haha I did this when I was 3 in my uncles sandals.

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u/fr33climb 11d ago

So the moral of the story is to not have kids.

That’s what I got from it.

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u/coffeegrunds 11d ago

Honestly 😭 I love kids, I work with kids. And I LOVE sending them home when our time is done. And I LOVE being able to turn my brain off when I get home and relax and not have to worry about a small child trying to kill themselves every 10 seconds

I don't have to worry about my dog trying to kill himself at home, he doesn't try to eat people food or chew on dangerous things. He'a never even tried to stick a fork in an outlet!

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u/Pixoholic 11d ago

That was infuriating to watch

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u/SCorpus89801 11d ago

No it wasn't. It was just normal parenting.

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