Stranger danger is everywhere, if only my son were able to digest this information. Every person he meets is greeted with a ‘Hello, do you want to be my friend?' He is a sociable boy and it is adorable in one sense but also extremely alarming. If he were making friends with other children this wouldn’t concern me but his frequent question is generally aimed at adults.
A person wouldn’t have to promise my child any confectionary item or puppy viewing for him to gladly accompany them home!
I’ve tried starting the ‘chat’ about not talking to strangers but he is too young to understand. Danger and consequences are not within his realm of experience, as becomes apparent when approaching main roads! We live in a brutal world where you can lose somebody forever in an instant without as much as a goodbye. I can’t really get my head around it so I don’t expect him to.
I did lose him once for a whole two minutes in a park. I literally took my eyes off him for a second and he was gone. Frantically I ran around the park, heart going like the clappers asking everybody I saw if they had seen my son. He was going through his pigeon chasing stage and had just followed the birds. He was blissfully unaware of the torment I had gone through when I found him but I had aged five years in those two minutes!
You hear about the good old days when children could play in the street without any fears of being abducted. In England, women used to leave their babies in their prams outside the supermarket as they did their weekly shopping. My mum never left me as I had a really good pram and I don’t think she wanted to risk getting it nicked! A friend of mine was left at the butchers once and it was only when her mum got home that she realised her mistake! I like to imagine her going through her list saying ‘Now I’m sure I’ve forgotten something but I just can’t put my finger on it”.
On some occasions my brother and I would wait up to forty minutes to be collected from school. You just couldn’t leave children on the side of the road these days but back then it was perfectly acceptable. I’d had the stranger danger chat though as on one occasion my parents’ car had broken down and they phoned the school. The kind elderly caretaker came with left over cakes to tell us the news and offered us a spot in the warm. I refused to believe him and we waited outside in the cold. My mum reprimanded me for not believing him but she had done her job well.
So how do we protect our children but at the same time not make them anti-social? A big question and not nearly as heart meltingly cute as ‘do you want to be my friend?”