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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

on the tube recently people were giving up seats for a mother and a grandfather who in turn let the children sit

233 replies

EleanorReally · 31/05/2025 08:26

surely the kids could have stood, or sat on their laps

i think this is a common scenario now but didnt used to be

OP posts:
MrsSkylerWhite · 01/06/2025 11:01

I’d have done the same with our kids. Don’t see the issue.

Polgarahairstreak · 01/06/2025 11:02

Also hidden disabilities...my daughter is 16 with a chromosome deletion. Struggles with anxiety and coordination and has had spinal fusion surgery... much safer for her to sit

Barnbrack · 01/06/2025 11:09

5128gap · 31/05/2025 11:01

No, it's definitely a (relatively) new thing. I remember going to the US in the 90s and being really surprised that children were sitting while adults stood. My experience was that children lap sat until too big and then stood. I wouldn't have dreamt of allowing them their own seat while adults stood. Not commenting on safety or right or wrong here, just my experience of etiquette.

And when you use your brain, and think beyond 'etiquette' and try to access common sense. Go on try... What do you think then? What do you think should happen?

ButterButterBattle · 01/06/2025 11:32

aliceinawonderland · 01/06/2025 10:49

@ButterButterBattle I probably would have made my way to first class if it existed… you’ll find the guard would be sympathetic

But I think the young people and students should feel ashamed of themselves… what a selfish bunch. They’ll be no happier in the long run. Helping others often leads to happiness

No first class on transpennine trains!

SleepingStandingUp · 01/06/2025 11:33

BunnyLake · 31/05/2025 09:12

And that would be because?

If a child has to give up their seat for someone is that because no adult has bothered to offer?

No it's the assumption that adult needs trump children's. "Children are less important than an adult and therefore they should only get a seat if one isn't needed by an adult" might seem like an old fashioned adage but it remains true in many people's minds. See also "I pay full fare and children are free / half price so I have more rights to a seat".

Personally I'd assume a seat offered to me with young children is being offered to us as a family and I'd seat my kids. If I had one I'd put them on my knee but I have three so I'd sit two and support the third. I always send them on the bus ahead of me to sit first

SleepingStandingUp · 01/06/2025 11:36

Custark · 01/06/2025 09:13

It’s easier for them to avoid rush hour, so yes, leaving after 9.30am would be probably he helpful to them and toddler DC.

You're assuming anyone with kids is merely riding around the city for fun and frolics. God forbid kids need to get to childcare so parents can work, or school or hospital appointments. If we have a 9.30 am hospital appointment then we have to catch the buses through rush hour, or leave at stupid o'clock in the morning and be hours early sat in a hospital.

DonnyBurrito · 01/06/2025 11:55

Custark · 01/06/2025 09:30

@Sofiewoo I guess I’m thinking more about school holidays, when people take their children out for the day. As I said, I give up my seat, but slightly resentfully. I have no choice but to be on the tube at rush hour, whereas most families on a day out could choose their travel a little differently.

Not a big deal, I know it can’t be avoided sometimes, but it grates a bit in a way that it doesn’t when giving up a seat to someone disabled, pregnant or elderly. Which I guess doesn’t make much sense as the elderly don’t necessarily need to be on a train at rush hour either. Which probably brings us full circle to OP’s point that decades ago, children weren’t given priority for seats, so I still have that thought ingrained. I think it’s fresh in my mind from last week a child of 7 or 8 getting on the tube with an adult and constantly saying ‘I want to sit down’ to her mum until an adult got up to give her a seat.

Her body was probably tired... They are a lot smaller, weaker and less able to stand/move for long periods of time compared to adults.

If it makes you feel better, when that little girl grows up, her taxes will one day be contributing to that adults state pension 🙂 alongside their health care, and everything else.

Perhaps adults could be a little more grateful for children, given that that will be the ones supporting them when they're elderly.

Custark · 01/06/2025 12:04

@DonnyBurrito after I’ve been at work all day I’m not going to stand up for a 7 year old who has been at the Natural History Museum or wherever, and their DM has then chosen to travel with them on a rush hour train.

Seymour5 · 01/06/2025 13:11

ButterButterBattle · 01/06/2025 11:32

No first class on transpennine trains!

I've experienced similar on the trains from Manchester. Last time, I booked a seat, train was cancelled and replacement was far too small. Lots of people standing, then I saw a seat with a bag on it and had to ask it's owner, a young man, to move it so I could sit. He looked surprised.

Sofiewoo · 01/06/2025 13:30

Custark · 01/06/2025 12:04

@DonnyBurrito after I’ve been at work all day I’m not going to stand up for a 7 year old who has been at the Natural History Museum or wherever, and their DM has then chosen to travel with them on a rush hour train.

So we should probably ban pensioners from mooching about and getting on tubes with their free passes. Apparently the tube is only for working adults. The disabled can fuck off too then.
But wait, do you work in an office? You be been sat down all day so you don’t get to use public transport either.

🤦‍♀️

EmpressaurusKitty · 01/06/2025 13:30

Seymour5 · 01/06/2025 13:11

I've experienced similar on the trains from Manchester. Last time, I booked a seat, train was cancelled and replacement was far too small. Lots of people standing, then I saw a seat with a bag on it and had to ask it's owner, a young man, to move it so I could sit. He looked surprised.

I commute on the Piccadilly line, which is one of the main routes to Heathrow, & it’s fairly normal for tourists to take 2 or 3 seats up with their luggage - both bags on seats & the huge cases that block access to seats.

If the tube’s getting busy, I can perfectly happily stop by one of the luggage-filled seats & ask to sit down. I even see it as being helpful because then the more easily accessible seats are available for other people.

Custark · 01/06/2025 13:57

@Sofiewoo not remotely what I said, but carry on making up your own little stories.

I think there’s a clash of expectations. When I was growing up I was expected to stand for adults. I grew up in London, my parents didn’t take me on at rush hour for a day out. Some of the younger generation seem to think that not only should children not get up, but adults should get up for children. I don’t expect children to give me their seat, but I’m certainly not getting up for a 7 year old. Despite all the hyperbole on this thread about them being future tax payers, future carers, their soft bones, their ‘tired little bodies’. Jesus, I’m sure they spend half their lives bombing around concrete playgrounds, but somehow become uniquely delicate on public transport.

Shwish · 01/06/2025 14:05

Barnbrack · 01/06/2025 10:42

Are you suggesting that was better? When the small people, with the soft bones and more likely to fall and be I jured in an emergency stop we're standing while able bodied adults sat on their asses?

Yep I think that's why exactly what this poster was suggesting. Some people just see kids as a nuisance. Adults needs come first. Selfish weirdos.

Seymour5 · 01/06/2025 14:12

Sofiewoo · 01/06/2025 13:30

So we should probably ban pensioners from mooching about and getting on tubes with their free passes. Apparently the tube is only for working adults. The disabled can fuck off too then.
But wait, do you work in an office? You be been sat down all day so you don’t get to use public transport either.

🤦‍♀️

I’m not in London, so I can’t use my pass on the Tube if I visit. Londoners are fortunate, they still get their older person’s pass at 60, it’s retirement age for the rest of England.

Older people’s passes have restrictions in most of England, we can’t travel free before 9.30 on weekdays, I think that’s helpful in ensuring there’s space for paying passengers going to work. I wonder why 60 is still considered old in London but not elsewhere?

5128gap · 01/06/2025 14:14

Barnbrack · 01/06/2025 11:09

And when you use your brain, and think beyond 'etiquette' and try to access common sense. Go on try... What do you think then? What do you think should happen?

Tell you what, why don't you go first? Apply your own brain. You may find you're then able to understand the content of my post and will be able to avoid rudely and erroneously challenging me on something different. Go on, try it.

spoonbillstretford · 01/06/2025 14:17

EleanorReally · 31/05/2025 08:34

in the past kids would have been advised to give up their seats for adults

And people used to hit their kids and say they should be seen and not heard. Things change.

Crunchymum · 01/06/2025 14:25

We live in London so use the Tube loads (thankfully not often in rush hour)

It's usually 1 or 2 adults with 3 DC. Rule is, if it's not busy they can have a seat each but if it starts to get busy the smaller 2 sit with the adult/s or share together. So we can reduce from 5 to 3 seats or less. Always ask kids to stand up for someone who needs a seat (older / pregnant etc). And I'd also stand myself if there was a lack of seats.

If we get on and someone gives up a seat for me then I take youngest on my lap and older 2 stand. Kids are 12, 10 and 7.

Often we are only jumping on for a stop or two so we wouldn't bother with seats at all.

We make our seating decisions based on how busy tube is, how far we're travelling etc. Sometimes it's easier just to all find a corner and stand in together.

aliceinawonderland · 01/06/2025 14:37

I think that small children should sit but maybe share a seat if there are other people standing.
And definitely 8 years and older should stand for the over 70s. It’s basic good manners and consideration for those less fit than you.

Looneytune253 · 01/06/2025 15:16

I always wonder about this. I work with toddlers and sometimes will have them on the priority seats on the bus. This is because it's in close proximity to the pushchair space. To me, this is non negotiable. 2 year olds absolutely cannot stand on a bus. Sometimes I wonder if the older folk that get on are annoyed they don't get 'their' seats. Just a caveat, I ALWAYS give up my own seat for anyone that needs it more.
Once I got an older toddler to stand up when there was a genuinely elderly woman got on the bus but I had to really hold on to her as young children really can't stand up on a bus.

musicismath · 01/06/2025 15:23

Shwish · 01/06/2025 14:05

Yep I think that's why exactly what this poster was suggesting. Some people just see kids as a nuisance. Adults needs come first. Selfish weirdos.

Sometimes adults' needs do come first. And sometimes children's do. It's not an either/or scenario.

Needspaceforlego · 01/06/2025 15:48

Custark · 01/06/2025 13:57

@Sofiewoo not remotely what I said, but carry on making up your own little stories.

I think there’s a clash of expectations. When I was growing up I was expected to stand for adults. I grew up in London, my parents didn’t take me on at rush hour for a day out. Some of the younger generation seem to think that not only should children not get up, but adults should get up for children. I don’t expect children to give me their seat, but I’m certainly not getting up for a 7 year old. Despite all the hyperbole on this thread about them being future tax payers, future carers, their soft bones, their ‘tired little bodies’. Jesus, I’m sure they spend half their lives bombing around concrete playgrounds, but somehow become uniquely delicate on public transport.

It's about safety, how can adults not see that little kids struggle to brace themselves against the movement of a bus or train?

On another thread there was a woman who posted about her brother loosing his two front teeth because he fell on a moving bus after his mum had made them give up their seats.

Custark · 01/06/2025 16:18

@Needspaceforlego I’ve already said I get up for children under 6. Can’t children older than that stand up? And if it’s so obscenely dangerous for kids why take them in rush hour trains? (For fun days out, obviously leaving aside medical appointments and childcare, which I don’t believe takes up any significant proportion of the many kids between 6-11 travelling at rush hour in holidays, and seemingly their parents expecting seats for them).

mrsjoyfulprizeforraffiawork · 01/06/2025 16:20

I would offer my seat to an exhausted-looking mother in the rush hour, as some look utterly worn out (whilst their children usually appear to be bouncing with energy - I very rarely see tired children on the tube and I am still commuting though well over retirement age). However, they usually then put their lively, not toddler, child in it (who continues to squirms about) and continue standing themselves (while looking as though they might pass out any minute). When I was small, I really wanted to be allowed to stand, as I liked holding the post and balancing on a moving train, so I was delighted if told to give my seat up when it got crowded. However, my parent(s) always then either made me sit on their lap or stand close and hold onto them. I do offer my seat to someone even older than me and/or less able to stand. I don't count children in this category unless they are disabled. I am a Londoner and in the 50s, 60s and 70s, children were expected to stand if an adult needed a seat. I don't recall any child I knew ever injuring themselves whilst doing so. In the last year I boarded a very crowded train on my way home and there were no seats available. 3 children who were about 6-10, I suppose, had a seat each. However, their kind, sensible father made them share two seats and give me one. That is quite rare these days and was much appreciated as I am not great at standing for too long (arthritic foot). When I worked in Sydney, schoolchildren were expected to stand if an adult needed a seat (the buses carried a notice about it), which was very nice.

Shwish · 01/06/2025 16:29

mrsjoyfulprizeforraffiawork · 01/06/2025 16:20

I would offer my seat to an exhausted-looking mother in the rush hour, as some look utterly worn out (whilst their children usually appear to be bouncing with energy - I very rarely see tired children on the tube and I am still commuting though well over retirement age). However, they usually then put their lively, not toddler, child in it (who continues to squirms about) and continue standing themselves (while looking as though they might pass out any minute). When I was small, I really wanted to be allowed to stand, as I liked holding the post and balancing on a moving train, so I was delighted if told to give my seat up when it got crowded. However, my parent(s) always then either made me sit on their lap or stand close and hold onto them. I do offer my seat to someone even older than me and/or less able to stand. I don't count children in this category unless they are disabled. I am a Londoner and in the 50s, 60s and 70s, children were expected to stand if an adult needed a seat. I don't recall any child I knew ever injuring themselves whilst doing so. In the last year I boarded a very crowded train on my way home and there were no seats available. 3 children who were about 6-10, I suppose, had a seat each. However, their kind, sensible father made them share two seats and give me one. That is quite rare these days and was much appreciated as I am not great at standing for too long (arthritic foot). When I worked in Sydney, schoolchildren were expected to stand if an adult needed a seat (the buses carried a notice about it), which was very nice.

But why is it nice? If you're elderly (which from your post I assume you are?) then sure a child - or indeed a younger adult should stand for you, fair enough. But I just don't get the logic that ANY child should stand for ANY adult. Just why?

Barnbrack · 01/06/2025 17:06

Custark · 01/06/2025 16:18

@Needspaceforlego I’ve already said I get up for children under 6. Can’t children older than that stand up? And if it’s so obscenely dangerous for kids why take them in rush hour trains? (For fun days out, obviously leaving aside medical appointments and childcare, which I don’t believe takes up any significant proportion of the many kids between 6-11 travelling at rush hour in holidays, and seemingly their parents expecting seats for them).

Do you think all parents get summer holidays off and those kids aren't being transported to summer clubs etc that are out of area? Naive

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