
Video Indian original mothers using a baby guide for their toddler during a family trip to New York became viral and caused mixed reactions over the Internet.
Shaubhangi Jagota, who lives in Canada with his family, recently published an Instagram clip that showed his 3.5 -year -old son happily to explore the Times Square while he was safely attached to his father. The child can see how he runs and jumps with excitement, he seems to enjoy freedom in the leash.
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Mrs. Jagota dealt with the wave of attention the video received and shared that the decision to use a guide was intentional and practical. “He is 3.5 and we are not ashamed to say that we put it on a leash,” she wrote in the title of the video. “In a city like New York, that was the best decision for our journey.”
The mother of the two explained that her toddler was highly energetic and prefers to wander freely. Leash, she said, hit the perfect balance between enabling her son to explore and ensure that he remains safe in a busy and unknown environment. “Our little runner always wants his freedom, and it just gave him it – without giving us a heart attack every five minutes,” she said.
She added a light twist and revealed that her son had transformed the whole experience into the game. “The best part? He thought we were on a leash. He thought of the sheriff and we were captured. Honestly, everyone won,” she joked.
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Mrs. Jagota also noted that they used two types of guides: short in crowded areas and longer in open areas and adapted access to their surroundings.
The video was ruled by an ongoing online debate on the use of children’s guides. While some parents prevented the choice as practical security measures, others questioned the need, and the views remain divided.
The user wrote, “Why were parents ashamed? For one, this is a great way to discourage baby snacks, two are learning to keep close while they are an independent Ergo of space awareness and three, three toddlers are sometimes better than what is bad, or it’s bad, or it’s bad. It’s bad, or it’s that it’s bad, or it’s bad, and it’s not. ”
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Another user wrote: “You should not be ashamed of being the safety of children.”
“When I first saw it at the New York Museum, I judged my parents a little, and then 5 minutes later I saw why the child was a leash and quietly admitted what a brilliant thing was, so no shame, you have to do what you have to do,” wrote the third user.
However, some of the Internet disagreed with the idea.
The user wrote: “Yeah, because your child’s education will stay with you and hold your hand now, and no one really wants to do it.”
Another user wrote: “Guess what … you should be ashamed! Learn children to follow the rules, but not like this. He is 3.5.
Mrs. Jagot’s video certainly opened a new round of interview around parenting in public areas.
(Tagstotranslate) Child safety