i absolutely love your channel and think your such an inspirational mum and your so funny and get me in the mood to clean and organise my things love your channel so much!! ❤
We have a baby gate to this area so he’s never in there alone only with us when he’s putting his shoes on. So I’m not too worried about them yet but he is tall enough to reach the second row now haha
It’s to keep him safe and he doesn’t mind. We have a monitor so he can always call for us if he needs anything. If there was ever a fire or earthquake I would hate for him to run out of his room and go hide somewhere and we can’t find him during the middle of an emergency. Once he’s older and fully understands emergencies and such he won’t need to baby lock on the door
Yeah, I don’t know what state you are in, but as somebody who used to work with CPS, if we found out that there was a lock or something preventing your child from opening his door independently from the inside of his room that would be a major red flag. Even though it is, therefore his safety, he needs to be able to leave his room independently in the case of a fire, say, God forbid there was a fire that prevented the rest of your family from getting out except for him he would be trapped. I’m not judging I understand your desire to keep him safe completely.
@@Urbex42 that’s interesting. I understand how that would be an issue for an older child but I know so many parents that have baby gates and locks on their baby’s doors for safety reasons.
As a kid who was constantly locked in a room evan as young child they will panic not being able to leave the room, And if an intruder brakes in through his window he can't leave the room it's safe for some things but for a lot of other safety concerns it's not.
My son at this age would also get out and get into stuff. Things happen and I would of most definitely been one of them moms you see on the news because they have been trying to identify my child who was found wandering the streets.... I kept one of these on his door as well... I had a monitor video and audio and could hear and see him it's not like they are being locked in there for the entire day because we don't want to parent... Idgaf I support this!
@JA-xv3qp I'm going to get hate, but here it goes: My family didn't believe in child proofing anything, and none of our neighbors did either. It was that we grew up in a home that was suited and paid for by our parents. If we did something stupid like playing with an electric socket, if it didn't kill us, we certainly learned not to mess with that sort of thing. If it killed us, that's one less idiot in the world. Our parents were typically paying attention and taught us, though. I just can't help but think that we now have many people in the world who don't understand basic common sense because they never had consequences or had to navigate anything safety related. Now, many of these parents haven't launched them into adulthood. Not to say that when we're watching our niblings, we're also introducing the specter of death at every turn. Of course not. Large machinery and tools aren't available. Each one has a set of eyes on them, and we do things together. We have a policy of returning them in/or better condition than we received them. This is why I have mixed feelings.
@@2Cambell I like your parenting ideas. It’s much more like the way I was raised and I’m still that way with my kids. I will tell them one time not to do something stupid but after that if they do it, I’m obviously not going to let them get grievously injured but if they trap or stumble or get hurt, then they learn not to do that by example.
i absolutely love your channel and think your such an inspirational mum and your so funny and get me in the mood to clean and organise my things love your channel so much!! ❤
I would definitely recommend as a mom with three kids, scotching all those pictures on the wall
We have a baby gate to this area so he’s never in there alone only with us when he’s putting his shoes on. So I’m not too worried about them yet but he is tall enough to reach the second row now haha
If I had good working hands and wrists, I would be using the knob covers, but we will have to go without when our unborn little one gets older.
Wait… you essentially lock your toddler in their room... idk about that.
It’s to keep him safe and he doesn’t mind. We have a monitor so he can always call for us if he needs anything. If there was ever a fire or earthquake I would hate for him to run out of his room and go hide somewhere and we can’t find him during the middle of an emergency. Once he’s older and fully understands emergencies and such he won’t need to baby lock on the door
Yeah, I don’t know what state you are in, but as somebody who used to work with CPS, if we found out that there was a lock or something preventing your child from opening his door independently from the inside of his room that would be a major red flag. Even though it is, therefore his safety, he needs to be able to leave his room independently in the case of a fire, say, God forbid there was a fire that prevented the rest of your family from getting out except for him he would be trapped. I’m not judging I understand your desire to keep him safe completely.
@@Urbex42 that’s interesting. I understand how that would be an issue for an older child but I know so many parents that have baby gates and locks on their baby’s doors for safety reasons.
As a kid who was constantly locked in a room evan as young child they will panic not being able to leave the room, And if an intruder brakes in through his window he can't leave the room it's safe for some things but for a lot of other safety concerns it's not.
My son at this age would also get out and get into stuff. Things happen and I would of most definitely been one of them moms you see on the news because they have been trying to identify my child who was found wandering the streets.... I kept one of these on his door as well... I had a monitor video and audio and could hear and see him it's not like they are being locked in there for the entire day because we don't want to parent... Idgaf I support this!
I have mixed feelings about this.
Share with the class
Yes please share with the class
@JA-xv3qp I'm going to get hate, but here it goes: My family didn't believe in child proofing anything, and none of our neighbors did either. It was that we grew up in a home that was suited and paid for by our parents. If we did something stupid like playing with an electric socket, if it didn't kill us, we certainly learned not to mess with that sort of thing. If it killed us, that's one less idiot in the world. Our parents were typically paying attention and taught us, though. I just can't help but think that we now have many people in the world who don't understand basic common sense because they never had consequences or had to navigate anything safety related. Now, many of these parents haven't launched them into adulthood. Not to say that when we're watching our niblings, we're also introducing the specter of death at every turn. Of course not. Large machinery and tools aren't available. Each one has a set of eyes on them, and we do things together. We have a policy of returning them in/or better condition than we received them. This is why I have mixed feelings.
@@Moon17ob see the response above to @JA-XV3QP
@@2Cambell I like your parenting ideas. It’s much more like the way I was raised and I’m still that way with my kids. I will tell them one time not to do something stupid but after that if they do it, I’m obviously not going to let them get grievously injured but if they trap or stumble or get hurt, then they learn not to do that by example.