Fear Versus Precaution

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I don’t even have a grandchild, yet I find myself involved in the controversy of whether parents should arm their young children with miniature sensing devices in order to keep track of them just in case they wander off in supermarkets, department stores, or even playgrounds. A story appeared in today’s New York Times by Anne Eisenberg about the introduction of a watch from Filip Technologies that tracks the location of a young child and lets him or her easily communicate with just the push of a bottom.

Surprisingly, many of the therapists Eisenberg interviewed for the story gave somewhat negative reviews of the Filip product and others like it because they felt children need to learn problem-solving skills and learn to manage stress. That means if they get lost they should experience fear and independence.

That’s all fine and good, but what about the distraught parents? Twenty-seven years ago, I lost Whitney in a Caldor’s in Riverhead. She was four at the time. I thought she was at my side, but she had wandered around the bend and proceeded to sit down on the floor. I immediately started to call her name and stood on my tippy toes to find her. No answer. In three seconds I imagined I had lost her forever, and my whole body started to shake. Of course, once I started running up and down the aisles, I spotted her on the floor. Had I bent down, rather than stood on my toes, I may have seen her through the racks of clothes. To this day I have no idea why she didn’t answer me.

I met up with a very well-known international physiatrist this morning at a friend’s brunch. I told him about the story in The Times as well as about my experience with Whitney. He had a different opinion than the ones you will read in the story. I didn’t ask permission to quote him so I am leaving out his name. “I don’t see anything wrong with using a gadget to locate a child, but let’s really evaluate the facts. The chances of losing a child is not very likely, so the GPS monitoring solution is a little extreme. What’s more, a gadget shouldn’t really replace good parenting skills. No harm, either way.”

If I had to do it all over again, I would have had ten alarms on Whitney. I am really curious about your opinion. To be clear, here’s the question: Is it better to teach young children independence by letting them experience fear, or to buy one of the various GPS monitoring devices as a safety precaution?

Where the Hell Have You Been?

Over the years, I remember getting upset with friends who were always late for appointments. Wherever we would go they would always be a half hour late. They didn’t mean to do it, but they were the type that just had no concept of time. On the flip side, I have a girlfriend who questions my every step any time we plan to meet up. She does not like to wait alone, so she makes sure we synchronize our clocks. I go out of my way to get to the destination early because I enjoy seeing the pleasure on her face when she realizes that I am there before her.

There have been a number of times when we started out early to meet someone only to get caught in heavy traffic making us an hour or so late. I hate that panicky feeling knowing that people are waiting. When you finally get to your destination they are staring at you wondering why you are so dysfunctional. The more you try to explain yourself, the more it sounds like you are fibbing.

Leave it to some software developer to come up with an app for both iOS and Android that all your family and friends can use to see real-time ETAs for everyone you’re meeting. It also tells you who has already arrived and parked at the destination. Waze is a social GPS and life traffic app that lets you know the location and timing of those you are about to meet or pick up, and be able to share the same info back with them. Yes, there is a privacy protection option so you can hide anytime you want to.

Waze has over 29 million drivers and is one of the largest groups of drivers in the world. Watch the video. You will be amazed at what this app can do.

Follow The Breadcrumbs

Before you go any further, be sure to read yesterday’s post about finding lost people, pets, and objects. Today’s topic is all about retracing your own footsteps. How many times have you walked into a room without the foggiest notion why you went in there in the first place? Kind of scary but it happens to people all the time. It gets scarier as we get older.

Just this morning a friend of mine over 50 couldn’t find his cell phone in my apartment. He couldn’t remember what room he was in and where he might have left it. He went into a complete panic mode even though Eliot and I were immediately looking for it. When we couldn’t find it, we simply dialed his cell from the house phone (Yes, we still have a landline) and it began ringing in his carry-on bag. He said he always puts his cell phone in his pocket so he was dumbfounded how it got in his mini luggage.

It is times like this that we all need to take a deep breath and retrace our footsteps to find out how we mindlessly misplaced something. It just takes a few seconds to forget what we were doing. If we could just drop a few breadcrumbs we could figure out where we were and where we are supposed to be going.

That is why I am introducing you to the Magellan eXplorist 110. . The GPS receiver is really for outdoor navigation when you want to repeatedly go to a specific spot when fishing, hiking, hunting, and biking.

However, some of my friends have resorted to hanging the GPS unit around their neck as if it was a mini compass. It records their every move with a series of digital breadcrumbs. They now can easily retrace their steps. No more threat of memory loss.
While this may be silly to some, to others it is a very serious solution to a nagging problem.

It retails for $129.99.