Jump to content

Recommended Posts

i've just been to peckham soft play, with my 10 month old for the first time.


the staff were really helpful and polite which was a great start and he absolutely loved crawling around inthe ball section.


but then... a young girl probably 4yrs old? threw a ball at my son. He laughed and it looked like she was just mucking around, so i just carried on watching. Then she lifted up a large mushroom thing and tried to throw it at him really hard. I went over, grabbed him and asked why she was doing that and she said, 'cos i want to hurt it.'

I calmly said, 'why do you want to hurt him, he's just a little baby and doesn't want to hurt you?'

she just looked at me and said 'i promise i will hurt it' and then picked up another object which was larger than him in size and moved over to him to smother him with it... so we went to another section ...but she followed... so we left



am i being over protective here. i've not had to deal with this sort of thing before - i feel quite upset about it. I guess this is something you just get used to... :( and is part of upbringing. Seems quite harsh tho!

Oh my god thats terrible! If ever anything like that happens you should always tell the parent or carer because it's one thing kids throwing the balls around in there, which can be a bit annoying but doesn't generally hurt that much if hit by one but to be picking up the bigger items to squash your little boy, thats awful. If you don't get any reaction or response from the parent/carer you should speak to the guy who works there and normally stands by the door in there (I haven't been for a while, he used to stand there and keep an eye on kids. Also if another kid does something dangerous like that make sure you tell them that in a firm voice, so they understand it's wrong.

Dont be put off going there because of one bad experience, I used to go there a lot and my little un loved it. I always found the best session's which weren't as manic with big kids were the first one which starts at 9.30.

I used to take my son to soft play all the time (now he's in reception) and most of the time it was great and the kids behaved well. Unfortunately, on occasion, have come across with similar problems where a child is behaving really badly or even dangerously and either not listening to his/her parents/carers or more often the parents/carers not paying any attention to the child. Personally I have no problem "telling off" (firmly telling them to stop, don't mean having a go or shouting at them) someone else's child if the parent/carer is not there or doesn't seem to care, especially if it seems that other children may get hurt etc. Trust me, I tell mine off plenty... If something like that ever happens again I'd firmly tell the child to stop and also speak to the parent/carer and if that doesn't help talk to the staff. The staff there are generally very nice & helpful but also pretty strict about following the rules. I do not see why you should be the one to leave simply because your baby is being harassed by a mean older child! Stuff like this REALLY annoys me, I'd never allow my child to behave that way! If I had told my child 2 times to stop it and he didn't, we'd be the ones out the door! Agree with Claire29, the 9.30 session is generally very good and you don't get that many "big" children. Don't give up!
I go soft play and no matter where you go there are obnoxious kids with oblivious parents. The parents want to be oblivious and go gossip when their children are being little monsters, so I just tell them off now. More often than not the children then behave and strangely start trying to play with us. It is sad because it seems they are being monsters for some and any attention they can get when their parents should just play with them in the first place.

My first child is sometimes quite badly behaved in places like that... not being mean to babies but gettig invokved in scuffles with other 6/7 year olds (blame testosterone)


I would prefer the other parent to tell me, and tell him off if I am not nearby.


I would agree, say something to the child, the staff, possibly the parent. Some parents will appreciate it, but some will have a go at you!!

I went the day before yesterday and have been a fair few times, and only once has there been an unruly kiddy there. It's not the place that's the problem (although softplays can get kids a bit overexcited and some mums think they can just sit down and not keep eyes because of the nature of the place), but as others have said, this kind of thing can happen anywhere ie playground, playgroup etc. It does sound particularly nasty what happened to you - I've not experienced that level of persistence before in a little one. I would just ask them to stop and then if that didn't work, find their parents and politely ask them.


I would avoid going during the 3-4pm or 4-5pm slots as large groups of school kids can pile in and really whip things up. I left early yesterday for this reason as my two are only very little, and as nice as some of the staff are in there, there's a few that don't do much and turn a blind eye.

I, personally, do not go to the playground or soft play and expect to spend my time looking for some badly behaved child whose parent who should be watching them in the first place. I go to have quality time with my own child and teach my child how to interact with others appropriately. I think it is poor show to expect other people to pick up your slack. I think that goes for the times I've stopped some kid trying to stamp on my child's head, 6 year olds kicking and punching toddlers, picking up kids who fall off climbing frames that are not age appropriate. I find this is not all the time but uncomfortably frequently and it pisses me off that it tends to be that the parents are off having their own social hour at the other end of wherever whilst other parents keep the stray children safe whilst trying to mind their own children. Not good.
These sorts of places are my idea of hell on earth. I can't bear the noise and every time I have been, there has been an abnormally badly behaved child that winds me right up - soft play seems to bring out the worst in even nice children. But, the OPs experience I think is unusual - I think young children do silly things without thinking, but for a child to tell an adult stranger that she deliberately wants to hurt their baby is pretty disturbing. Where was the parent/ carer while this was going on?

hello,


i'm very relieved by all these posts. Clearly this really was a one off and not something people 'get used to'. I was a bit shocked and perhaps if it wasn't my first time there, i'd have had the courage to go up and say soemthing.


I did ask her where her mother was but she just looked at me blankly. I also looked around at all the mums/carers expecting to catch someone's eye but no one was watching (which was when i moved sections). People must have been aware what was going on as no one was talking except us and the whole session was fairly quiet with few people there.


It does make you ask yourself, what's been said to her to make her say those things to someone else?


anyway - next time i'll be better at dealing with the situation. i was just so stunned and upset... and weirdly a little embarrassed?


i should have looked for carer and/or said something to the soft play person.

Oh that's horrible, I'd add as others have said, that normally it's fine, just the occasional rough older kid but nothing deliberatly vicious like that. I think I'd be tempted to at least tell the staff about it. I've no experience of kids that age but it does sound like the child has issues, and yes veru annoying when you want to spend time with your own kid and end up looking after other peoples!!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Where did I say he did a good job? Yup and Corbyn was very close to Len McCluskey and funded by Unite wasn't he...they're all as bad as each other... Labour have to purge their party of the far-left - they're a disaster. Allan Johnson summed it up so well on election night in 2019....  
    • Thank you for the detailed advise @trinidad It is definitely damage we are concerned about. I don’t think Evri would agree to pay the bill to fix our gate or letter box if they were to be damaged as a result of their delivery drivers helper. Our doorbell can be heard from outside when rung so we don’t quite believe the aggressive simultaneous door/letter box banging is necessary. It can be quite a shock it is done very aggressively.  I’ll definitely action the steps you’ve kindly provided along with a phone call tomorrow. I do sympathise with the role drivers have and how busy they are, which is why we tried communicating directly with her but sadly we haven’t succeeded 
    • What outcome would you like? Disciplinary action? Not to have the driver back? Retraining? I know there is alot of pressure on drivers to deliver within a set day. if he slams the gate, is it evidence he is causing damage, or is the noise a irritant to yourself? You could put a sign up or buy a signing asking to close the gate gentle???? can you hear the door bell from the door? he might be ringing, not hearing and therefore knocking. In trhe notes section of the be livery page, there is a note section, although there is not 100 per cent these notes would be read as these drivers are constantly rushing.  I did a google search for you, i found this and you can try the envri website Contact Us | Evri   To complain to Evri, you can follow these steps: Contact Customer Service: Call Evri's customer service at 0330 808 5456 for assistance with your complaint.    1 Write a Letter: Address your complaint to Capitol House, 1 Capitol Close, Morley, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS27 0WH.    1 Use the Official Website: Visit the Evri complaints page on their official website for detailed instructions on how to submit a complaint.    2 Email or Call for Specific Issues: For issues like missing or damaged parcels, you can email or call 0800 988 8888, which is free to call.    1 These methods will help you effectively communicate your concerns to Evri.   My driver is called anthony, he is brilliant to be honest. I cant fault him.
    • When I have more time and energy, I will look up the actual number of votes cast for each party in that election, rather than the number of seats won. I'm interested to see that you apparently  think that  Boris Johnson did a good job of "leading the country through Covid." Is your memory really that short? I won't stoop to calling Johnson and his cronies names in the way that you seem to think is appropriate for left wing politicians. At least the left wing politicians have some semblance of morals and a concern for people who aren't in some over privileged inner circle and/or raking in money for themselves on the back of an epidemic. I'm not going to open a can of worms on here  by commenting on the disgraceful so called "purge". 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...