It's hard to tell how tolerant a person actually is based on their venting about a children's behavior on the internet. It just strikes a nerve with me because of how many people all parents (seriously, ask any parent) have to deal with on a regular basis who are completely intolerant, and make not the slightest effort to empathize with what someone else might be going through. The fact that the tranquility of their world is being disrupted is the only thing that matters.
Try denying a 3 year old child some toy they see on the shelf in a store. It doesn't matter how awesome a parent you are. They're three years old. They will throw a fit.
They haven't had the opportunity to learn appropriate behavior in this situation yet. As your child is crying in public, someone is going to accuse you of being a horrible parent with spoiled children
because you're currently in the process of teaching your child how not to be spoiled. The stranger just too absorbed in the minor discomfort you've caused them to realize that.
It doesn't even take something like that, though. A guy once yelled at me, "SHUT YOUR DAMN KID UP!"
because my kid giggled next to him.
are less willing to empathize with other people's varying levels of social skill and emotional development.
I used those specific words for a reason.
So you're saying that... parents are dicks? Because that's the same exact logic dicks use. "You should care that I'm being a racist, misogynistic pig - the other people here don't care. You just need to grow a thicker skin/develop a little bit of emotional fortitude. It's really bugging me." If you don't care about stressing me out, why, exactly, should I give a shit about doing the same to you?
You're drawing a false relationship here between disruptions that are intentional and disruptions that are inevitable. A person is a dick because they unnecessarily make life more uncomfortable for the people around them and/or simply refuse to behave in the interest of social harmony.
This world has several billion people on it all going about living their lives, and every single person is their own unique set of circumstances. It's a simple reality that we have to share space with one another now and then, and the sum of all these people's varying circumstances is not going to conform exactly to any one person's sensibilities. Given this reality, social harmony hinges on the ability of all participants to ignore what doesn't concern them, and to make a reasonable effort not to be disruptive to others. Those who cannot bother with the former are literally demanding that others stop going about their lives and instead focus on tending to their exclusive comfort, and that is just as disruptive to social harmony as the latter.
And I believe that everyone should spend time around children, even if it makes them uncomfortable, because it takes practice. Just like it takes years of practice for a child to learn the restraint not to throw a fit when they don't get what they want, it takes years of practice to be thick-skinned about unsolicited noises and activity in your environment.
And the sound of crying is /intended/ to grab attention and act as a disharmony! That's what it's for! And there's something wrong with people responding to that? But whatever.
I should also point out that someone who is experience with children can generally recognize at a subconscious level the urgency level of a cry. Yeah, it's a noise that's designed for the purpose of being distracting, but it's also more communicative than just that.
One of my kids starts crying because they're having a mild argument and they don't like the outcome? I don't consciously register the sound at all. Somebody else starts complaining about it, and suddenly I'm pressured to get involved. That bothers me, because I believe it would be healthier for my kids to learn to work problems out between them, instead of seeking the word of authority as a default. That's when the person who can't tolerate is more disruptive than the kid crying.
One of my kids starts crying because they got hurt? I can recognize that and am checking it out immediately.