Mother made teenage son wear his wellies to school...almost!
Posted: February 8th, 2011, 9:32 am
I must share this experience. I was walking in the rain last Friday around 8.45am. As it was raining heavily I was wearing my long see thru plastic rainmack over a jacket. I also wore my rainpants tucked into my wellies.
I was minding my own business walking on the footpath when this lady appear from a side road with I presume her two sons. They looked sheepish in their body language.
The first boy was dressed in his school uniform but had a long yellow raincoat on and a pair of green wellies. The second boy, I presume his brother was wearing a shiny green raincoat, rain pants and wellies which were blue.
Their mum wore a parka coat and wellies.
I was walking behind them. The local secondary school was about a hundred yards from the side road.
When they got to the school gates, the older boy stopped and said to his mother in a loud, aggressive tone: "Now I've worn those stupid wellies, I want to wear my shoes into school or I will be jeered and laughed at."
His mother stopped and took his shoes from a plastic bag. He removed his wellies, one by one and put on his shoes. He then struggled to remove the yellow rainmack. It was a button type of coat and his hands were cold enough to be fidgeting with the buttons. Eventually, he took that off and handed it to his mother. He then disappeared in through the entrance gate 20 yards up the road.
But just as he had removed the raincoat another woman came walking by with her dog. I'd say she was retired and suitable clad in appropriate raingear. She knew the woman and her boys. And she exclaimed: " Hi Mrs Bolton, awful weather this morning. I think it is going to brighten up later though. Aren't your two boys very good and sensible to be wearing their raincoats and wellingtons to school".
The younger boy was still standing besde his mother, I was all the time pretending to be taking a phone call on my mobile. The younger boy seemed to be so embarrassed while the older guy had just bolted up to the school entrance.
The mother said goodbye to the younger boy, and then proceeded to walk wit the elderly lady. I walked behind them and could cleary hear the mother telling her friend about the hassle she had persuading the older boy to wear his raincoat and wellies.
The elderly lady replied that she shouldn't give in to her sons and she should insist on them wearing their raingear.
With that I crossed over the road and headed back down to my house.
I wondered if the mother insisted on her boys wearing their raingear later that day, because in spite of what the elderly lady had said about the weather improving later on, it continued to rain.
I was minding my own business walking on the footpath when this lady appear from a side road with I presume her two sons. They looked sheepish in their body language.
The first boy was dressed in his school uniform but had a long yellow raincoat on and a pair of green wellies. The second boy, I presume his brother was wearing a shiny green raincoat, rain pants and wellies which were blue.
Their mum wore a parka coat and wellies.
I was walking behind them. The local secondary school was about a hundred yards from the side road.
When they got to the school gates, the older boy stopped and said to his mother in a loud, aggressive tone: "Now I've worn those stupid wellies, I want to wear my shoes into school or I will be jeered and laughed at."
His mother stopped and took his shoes from a plastic bag. He removed his wellies, one by one and put on his shoes. He then struggled to remove the yellow rainmack. It was a button type of coat and his hands were cold enough to be fidgeting with the buttons. Eventually, he took that off and handed it to his mother. He then disappeared in through the entrance gate 20 yards up the road.
But just as he had removed the raincoat another woman came walking by with her dog. I'd say she was retired and suitable clad in appropriate raingear. She knew the woman and her boys. And she exclaimed: " Hi Mrs Bolton, awful weather this morning. I think it is going to brighten up later though. Aren't your two boys very good and sensible to be wearing their raincoats and wellingtons to school".
The younger boy was still standing besde his mother, I was all the time pretending to be taking a phone call on my mobile. The younger boy seemed to be so embarrassed while the older guy had just bolted up to the school entrance.
The mother said goodbye to the younger boy, and then proceeded to walk wit the elderly lady. I walked behind them and could cleary hear the mother telling her friend about the hassle she had persuading the older boy to wear his raincoat and wellies.
The elderly lady replied that she shouldn't give in to her sons and she should insist on them wearing their raingear.
With that I crossed over the road and headed back down to my house.
I wondered if the mother insisted on her boys wearing their raingear later that day, because in spite of what the elderly lady had said about the weather improving later on, it continued to rain.