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I have a love/hate relationship with indoor playgrounds.

Living in Canberra, they are necessary during the long winter hibernation where temperatures are often single digit and accompanied by wind chill factors that don’t bear mentioning.

Whenever we arrive at an indoor playground, my son can barely believe his luck in life. He excitedly climbs, jumps around the ball pit and explores the cavernous netted mazes until he reaches the desired aim of being tired enough to go home for a day nap.

When he starts yawning, I feel like I have put him through the child equivalent of a hamster wheel but hey – he’s happy and I’m happy so everyone’s a winner.

Once the tired little man is all tucked up in his cot, it is then – and only then – that I can even begin to think of having a coffee and a rest. For while those indoor playground have cafes, I have barely indulged my need for caffeine there.

As much as I would love to take a relaxed approach, I am forced into helicopter parenting mode the whole time we are there.  I hover while monitoring his behaviour towards other children, intervening when he gets a bit too grabby and reminding him to share and be gentle with other children.

Mostly though, I hover to watch the behaviour and erratic actions of other children towards him.

At 19 months old, my son doesn’t really stack up against the might of a four-year old running on a collision course with him while their attention is fixed somewhere else. Likewise, he can’t do much defending when pushed off a toy or told to go away. I let most things slide though, allowing him to learn about life in a controlled way.

If I intervene, it is to ensure basic safety for both my son and those children who somehow interact with him on the playground.

Don’t hit, don’t punch, don’t slap etc. and be careful to watch where you’re running when there are babies and toddlers about. Fair enough, I think.

In my experience, the most difficult part of negotiating a playground hasn’t been the children but their parents.

There seems to be two main types of parents; the first being those who sit completely removed from their child and enjoy that cup of coffee, the one I have abstained from (not jealous). My theory is that they figure their child is old enough to look after themselves but, in reality, it also means their child is free to run riot.

One time I saw a child crouch down and wee on a play mat then run off. I looked around for the responsible parent but saw nobody launch up to fix the situation so I put some wet wipes over the puddle and informed the staff.

The second main group of parents are the ones that do intervene and pay attention. These can prove trickier because clashes can quickly ensue.

Like the time I overheard a man say to a five year-old “hey, you touch my son again and you’ll cop it!”. Every parent within earshot collectively gasped and the father of the scolded boy, now upset, ran up to the man and had a rather animated argument.

But the biggest run-in I’ve seen involved a mother who let several of her older children play on a baby jumping castle in the baby area. The kids ranged in age from around 8-14 years old and they were soon climbing the walls and kamikaze jumping onto each other, screaming all the way.

After five minutes of this, another mum said to the group that they’d had their fun and could they now please leave the baby area because it is designed for 0-4 year olds. Out of nowhere, the mum of the older kids ran up yelling: “How dare you tell my kids what to do! Nobody tells my kids what to do except me!”.

When the mum calmly held her ground and said the playground is clearly marked for babies, aggro mum didn’t back down: “I told them they could play in there, they can break the rules if I tell them it’s ok”.

And she didn’t stop with her children’s morality lesson there: “I told my kids they could play in there until a baby wanted a turn so what’s your problem?”.

Every fibre in my body was telling me not to engage but I couldn’t help it – I wanted to stand by this mum who had pointed out what I considered a fair boundary.

I piped up: “Well, my son would have loved to have played in there but it was way too intimidating”.

Aggro mum turned her sights on me: “Oh you’re one of those mums? One that cotton balls their kids? Well I’m here to tell you that life isn’t like that and your kids are in for a rude shock!”.

Thankfully, at this point she seemed to have gotten whatever it was out of her system and huffed off with her kids in trail. The experience left a mark on me though.

It is difficult balancing your own parenting style and beliefs against those of someone else but places like playgrounds force you to. What you may think is a perfectly reasonable request might enrage another parent.

I still hesitate before intervening but only out of a sense of wanting to give my son the space to learn necessary life lessons rather than because I fear the reactions of other parents. The world is a jungle gym out there and not everyone is going to be nice or reasonable, even adults.

Have you had a similar experience at an indoor playground? Do tell!

  • I really enjoyed reading this. Thank you for sharing.

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  • I too have only occasionally had the money to take her to an indoor playground, and I am the same at hovering – the actions of some of the bigger kids is scary, and the parents do not seem to give a damn.

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  • Very true great article that’s why most parents have given up using indoor playgrounds.

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  • Thanks for the article. They can be crazy places. I like to go to the smaller, quieter centres

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  • What a disgusting reaction from that mother! ..

    I spoke about this a little while ago, feel terrible for my mummy friends who aren’t as outspoken as myself and are forced to let so much bad behavior slide.
    Realistically it becomes a power trip from some women, unfortunately I don’t think much will change, everyone has their own ways to parent and they will clash when we are all forced into these difficult situations..

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  • They are nothing short of creative ! 🙂

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  • I have had many similar experiences and like you believe monitoring your children is important. It is always tricky if you need to speak to other children about their behaviour so I usually address the problem with my own children instead, e.g. saying “It is annoying when other children don’t share”.

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  • Oh yes this sounds like a total drama we have in our household. lol

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  • So very true one of the reasons we gave up using indoor playgrounds. kids that just do not care or listen and parents that are just as bad.

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  • great article, I always supervised my daughter whenever she is

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  • I agree with you, there are a lot of parents that let their child run around unsupervised which is not teaching the child at all! I don’t go during school holidays as it is not safe for our pre schoolers as older kids run wild.

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  • This was an interesting read. Thanks for sharing.

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  • Interesting article. Thanks for sharing.

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  • Just read all of the comments. Can’t believe some of the behaviour of parents. I was a helicopter parent when my kids were little. Now they are older I let them play, however I keep watch. They aren’t interested in going in the toddler area, and I wouldn’t let them. Thankfully I haven’t experienced any really bad behaviour from kids or parents.

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  • Thanks for a very interesting read.

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  • some parents are impossible and should stay at home and let their kids learn to play

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  • I shudder at the way some children will grow up with the abysmal lack of common sense and good parenting shown by some parents. Selfish doesn’t even begin to describe their attitude. And they’ll be the ones who scream blue murder when their child gets in to trouble when they grow up. And of course it will bever be their fault.

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  • Thanks very much for your article

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  • Thanks for the memories lol! Some of those playgrounds are a battlefield, a free for all and I found it was the older children that were dropped off to run riot while mum went off shopping, these were the free cafe playgrounds where age limits did apply, however some people don’t think the rules apply to them and their behaviour when confronted…appalling.

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  • I am also a helicopter mum. At a playcentre my 18months old was kicked in the stomach like a football by a 2-3 year old boy. The mother of the other boy did come over to ask if my child was ok after the incident. In the same breath she went on to say that her son had a habit of kicking children. What i dont understand is why you would sit so far away from your child so that your only action in these incidents is to say “oops sorry”. This 2-3 year old boy then went past a little 3month old baby and kicked the baby in the head. Again the mother went up with the “oops sorry” to the parents of the little baby. They were not as forgiving and the mother of the little baby went right off at the boy and his mother. I heard her say to her son as they left the playground ” you have been such a good boy that i will buy you a treat on the way home”. Lets hope this kicking is just a phase for this child because there are no consequences for his actions.


    • If there is staff there they have a duty of care and incidents such as this should be reported to them. It sounds like the child who kicks others at random needs professional help.
      Childcare centres split children up in age groups – partly for safety, partly for level of understanding. In Adelaide we have an Ikea store which has a childcare/playground. The ages have to be strictly adhered to. Parents/guardians have to remove the child’s shoes, which are all put in separate small containers and the adults responsible for them are given numbers. They have to show ID to put a child in the area and to collect them. Staff record details and mobile phone numbers in case of an emergency with their child.

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