fmdog44
Well-known Member
- Location
- Houston, Texas
Define "Screams". Kids yell and cry but screaming can mean several things. The choice is yours but I would definitely pursue it. The child could be in real danger.
The "mother" is an irresponsible girl and she is not married. She doesn't want the kid so she leaves him at the grandparents a lot. The grandparents are not old. They are in their 50's but we think they're just inconsiderate as to us as a neighbor.I was wondering the same thing about the parents and if the child does the same thing at home. The child might have problems and maybe the grandparents are just too old to take care of a youngster.
What about talking to your other neighbors about this, and then all confronting the grandparents together? If the screaming child is as loud as you say, I would expect that other people are annoyed too.. . . We're not going to say anything to our neighbor or approach them because they would be combative and we don't want that. . . .
There are no other neighbors close by.What about talking to your other neighbors about this, and then all confronting the grandparents together? If the screaming child is as loud as you say, I would expect that other people are annoyed too.
He is a spoiled brat with no discipline or guidance. He does what he wants and they don't stop him or correct him. They are of a different culture.Sounds like a spoiled brat, Colleen. Sorry you have to deal with the noise.
I don't think the child is being abused. Just inconsiderate, clueless grandparents![]()
The "mother" is an irresponsible girl and she is not married. She doesn't want the kid so she leaves him at the grandparents a lot. The grandparents are not old. They are in their 50's but we think they're just inconsiderate as to us as a neighbor.
Ok now see, here's what your very first post said.
Just curious how you would handle a neighbor that's very close to our back yard (we're only separated by a 10' right-of-way) that has their 4 year old grandchild stay with them several days a week and screams constantly. Would you just ignore it? Believe me, it's very nerve wracking. There isn't any barrier between our properties that would block some of it out. We had an estimate last week on having a block wall built but it's way over our budget. I dread this summer.
What you opened this thread with, above, IMMEDIATELY raised all kinds of red flags for me. I will ALWAYS advocate for children as the innocent victims of situations over which they have no control, which is why I advocated making a call. Many subsequent posts later, it turns our that you don't think the child is being abused. The child apparently has an uncaring mother and grandparents who don't seem to mind that she screams the whole time (which would tend to make me think they're not giving her much attention) and it's just a situation where everyone's clueless but not abusive.
What do you mean treatment? No child deserves to be in an environment that makes them unhappy.Can I just quote these lines of yours back at you:"If its stupid, but it works, it ain't stupid"!
Maybe this particular child does need this kind of treatment right now, and he'll grow out of it to become a wonderful rounded person, inspite of these extraordinary times we're all living through, and the distress caused to neighbours.
BTW I'd give my vote to Pam Ayres having the wherewithal to sort the whole situation too!
What do you mean treatment? No child deserves to be in an environment that makes them unhappy.
Y'know, I'd be given to take a bit of action.
I'd consider taping the episodes
and setting my speakers in my yard adjacent to theirs, and crank up the play back volume
….maybe play a bit of little drummer boy's 'Do you hear what I hear' as an intro
Ditto!Y'know, I'd be given to take a bit of action.
I'd consider taping the episodes
and setting my speakers in my yard adjacent to theirs, and crank up the play back volume
….maybe play a bit of little drummer boy's 'Do you hear what I hear' as an intro
As tempting as it may be to record the screaming child and then play it back for the grandparents, that would be considered intentional harassment and disturbing the peace, and could get you fined if the neighbors took it to court. A screaming child, on the other hand, is just a screaming child.
Better to record a few hours of it, and play it for the police and child protective services.
It’s funny though.As tempting as it may be to record the screaming child and then play it back for the grandparents, that would be considered intentional harassment and disturbing the peace, and could get you fined if the neighbors took it to court. A screaming child, on the other hand, is just a screaming child.
Better to record a few hours of it, and play it for the police and child protective services.
I agree with fmdog's request: Define "screams."
A "screaming" child could be a hearing-impaired child who says everything in a very loud voice.
He could be autistic or developmentally disabled.
He could be bored to death and frustrated, desperately in need of companionship.
Yes, he could be a spoiled brat.
He could be physically abused and scared to death.
He could be mentally abused: "Bad boys like you are going to hell."
He could just be playing, and every time he raises his voice, some crabby neighbor complains about "screaming."
He might even be trying to sing, for God's sake!
So, what is meant by "He screams constantly?"