Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Readers share what irks them about strangers' kids

The top pet peeves — from shouting in restaurants to interrupting parents

Slideshow
Image: Newborn babies
  Sleeping beauties
Sweet dreams are made of this: Photographer Tracy Raver captures the calm contentment of napping newborns in these adorable portraits.

more photos

Community
Discuss. Share. Connect.
Join our newest community! It’s a place for meaningful discussions around topics important to TODAY's moms.
  Special feature
The worst baby names of all time
Harry Pitts? Discover the most humiliating and ridiculous names.
  7-year-old dubbed ‘young Picasso’
Dec. 5: Like many kids his age, Kieron Williamson likes to draw and paint – but that’s about where the comparisons end. NBC’s Amy Robach speaks with the talented young painter and his family.

  
  Stamps, beauty products donated to holiday drive
Dec. 4: Shelli Gardner, founder of Stampin' Up, and Noah Bremen, founder of Noah's Naturals, tell the TODAY hosts about what they are donating to this year's TODAY annual holiday toy drive.

  Special feature
The worst baby names of all time
Discover the strangest names, from those based on diseases (Cholera Peace), food (Bread White) and more.
TODAY
updated 4:33 p.m. ET May 20, 2008

Whether it’s the screaming tot in the grocery store or the ill-tempered kid in the restaurant, most of us — at one time or another — have been irritated by other people’s kids. Even the biggest fan of kids has had moments when they were frustrated with children causing chaos in public. TODAYShow.com readers share their pet peeves:

I am a server at a restaurant in town, and the way people let their kids just run around the place with no concern for other people, is extremely irritating. There are people walking around with hot plates and trays of food, and the last thing you should have to worry about is some kid on roller shoes that’s whizzing past. Keep 'em in their seat folks!
--Dawn Brussow, Aurora, IL (submitted on March 9, 2008)

Children screaming and kicking the back of my seat or playing with the tray table directly behind me on an airplane drives me crazy! Especially when the parents act like it's not happening or that it's cute just because their little darling is doing it. It’s not cute, it’s not "just kid behavior"—it's horrible and worse when the parents act like you are the bad guy for not wanting to put up with a five-hour flight with a little foot in your back and a screaming child in your ear.
--Anonymous, Washington, DC (submitted on March 7, 2008)

I think it is extremely rude for a parent to be talking on the telephone with you and their child interrupts. What is worse is the parent will either start a conversation with the child and leave you hanging for five minutes or the parent will start hollering "don't you see I'm on the phone?!" and you have to listen to that conversation. I knew from a very early age not to interrupt my parents while they were on the phone or visiting with friends unless it was an emergency!
--Mari Williams, Southaven, MS (submitted on March 7, 2008)

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

This could most likely be more the parents fault but I hate when the kids record the outgoing message on their parents voice mail. It's not cute, it's just plain irritating and stupid. It is usually loud and hard to understand. Parents, just say no to this and record your own message like an adult should.
--Bob Shelton, Sarasota, FL (submitted on March 7, 2008)

I hate when kids have on dirty shoes and coats. I understand kids get dirty, but if a person owns a washing machine their kids sneakers and coats should never been covered in dirt for more than a couple of days. Without naming any names, I have a friend whose children wear the same coats and shoes all year without ever getting washed. What she doesn't know is that every time they come to my home to spend the night with my kids I wash their stuff before they go home.
--Anonymous , Cleveland, OH (submitted on March 7, 2008)

One of my biggest pet peeves is the enormous strollers these mothers feel the need to push around and store everything and anything on (often without the kid). Clueless (or self absorbed) mothers are unaware of the frustration this causes everyone else around them as they attempt to navigate them through isles. Get a stroller just big enough to carry the kid and a few kid necessities. The stroller isn't your personal caddy be courteous of those around you. Also, not everyone thinks your kids are cute; running around unattended and left to misbehave is rude. You chose to be a parent so be a parent not a best friend, discipline isn't a four letter work.
--Anonymous , Seattle, WA (submitted on March 7, 2008)

The thing that gets under my skin is when other people's children help themselves to your fridge. I don’t know where there manners are. I would of never done that as a child and my kids are taught better. Let’s all learn a little respect!
--Kari Hentzen, Mindenmines, MO (submitted on March 7, 2008)

The roller shoes! Especially at the malls or when I'm shopping. There are signs everywhere that say "no skateboarding, no roller skating, no bicycling"—parents think that just because the ‘shoes have wheels their kids are exempt from these rules. At the mall kids flying down the walkway near the entrance of stores almost slamming into people—or the kids that just got them and don't know how to balance on them—falling down in front of you and you get the dirty look when you almost step into them.
--Randy Smith, Kingsland, GA (submitted on March 7, 2008)

It drives me crazy when I hear children answer an adult with a "Huh?", "Yeah", or "Whatever". They accept a gift and don't say "Thanks", and recently I asked one young child "What's the magic word?" and they said "Now". The sad part was that they weren't kidding!
--Shonda Bowman Wright, Pell City, AL (submitted on March 8, 2008)

My top pet peeves about people kids is when the parent let walk around the store and they touch everything they shouldn't. Also when they try to open the boxes or wrapped books. trust me I have seen it all. I seen kids scream to the top of their lungs in book stores while people are trying to read. Last and the worst, when the kids get smart out the with other people and then you say something they want to run to their parents. they Shouldn't been with them in 1st place.
--Anonymous, Riverdale, MD (submitted on March 8, 2008)


Sponsored links

Resource guide