Oh dear - sorry to be the spoil sport here but this is just irresponsible. This child might not have much of any hearing in two years time. I often see parents with unprotected kids on concerts etc - they have no idea that a child's hearing is so much more sensitive than the hearing of an adult. This is abuse from ignorance, not bad intention.
YourValentine · Member since
Btw - in my life it is always children waking up the adults :-)
pittrek · Member since
[QUOTE] [b]YourValentine wrote:[/b]
Oh dear - sorry to be the spoil sport here but this is just irresponsible. This child might not have much of any hearing in two years time. I often see parents with unprotected kids on concerts etc - they have no idea that a child's hearing is so much more sensitive than the hearing of an adult. This is abuse from ignorance, not bad intention.[/QUOTE]
Come on, I was sharing a room with my brother who was a huge heavy metal fan and I still can hear pretty good :-)
pittrek · Member since
[QUOTE] [b]YourValentine wrote:[/b]
Btw - in my life it is always children waking up the adults :-)[/QUOTE]
Well I don't have my own children yet, but as a person who was as a student taking her of his sister's children, I FULLY agree :-)
emrabt · Member since
[QUOTE] [b]YourValentine wrote:[/b]
Oh dear - sorry to be the spoil sport here but this is just irresponsible. This child might not have much of any hearing in two years time. I often see parents with unprotected kids on concerts etc - they have no idea that a child's hearing is so much more sensitive than the hearing of an adult. This is abuse from ignorance, not bad intention.[/QUOTE]
Hmm it's more irresponsible for the child not to be a booster seat of some kind, his seatbelt doesn't fit.
YourValentine · Member since
I agree about the seat but the noise is really dangerous, as well. Please look at the following fact sheet:
http://www.entnet.org/HealthInformation/Noise-Induced-Hearing-Loss-in-Children.cfm
When you go to a concert and the noise starts to hurt your ears you will automatically do something to make it better, for example roll a piece of tissue and use it as an ear protection. Children do not have this option - they won't notice the relatively little pain and one event can be enough to cause permanent hearing damage. You simply cannot expose children to such noise, it is abusive.
Sebastian · Member since
I love that song by the way.
Missreclusive · Member since
[QUOTE] [b]YourValentine wrote:[/b]
I agree about the seat but the noise is really dangerous, as well. Please look at the following fact sheet:
http://www.entnet.org/HealthInformation/Noise-Induced-Hearing-Loss-in-Children.cfm
When you go to a concert and the noise starts to hurt your ears you will automatically do something to make it better, for example roll a piece of tissue and use it as an ear protection. Children do not have this option - they won't notice the relatively little pain and one event can be enough to cause permanent hearing damage. You simply cannot expose children to such noise, it is abusive.[/QUOTE]
Thanks for the link and info. I was already thinking of getting earplugs for the kids when we go see QE, I will definitely do it now. The oldest isnt keen on the idea tho!
YourValentine · Member since
There are really cool earmuffs which are comfortable to wear mainly for very small kids but older kids might prefer them to ear plugs, as well
Surely your older child thinks it is uncool but he has to wear seat belts and bicycle helmets, as well, so he might understand and even appreciate them :-)
matt z · Member since
I thought for sure this would be link to headphones of some sort.
We used to pull a nasty trick on my bro if he fell asleep in the afternoon. We'd put the headphones on and crank up track one from DIO's STRANGE HIGHWAYS....
I guess like the Back to the Future movie scene with EVH's dives.
Thank god it never happened to me. Could have been frightening