The question of parents with young children in public
Can I just say from the outset that I do not subscribe to the belief that children are better seen and not heard, and that I have no problem, distress, irritation or otherwise with those who bear children, nor with children themselves.
However.
What I really find irritating are parents who choose to bring their children to places which may be inappropriate for small children, and where adults are trying to engage in an adult environment.
I was at an exhibition in the Irish Museum of Modern Art recently, when I counted three prams, and two of them with crying children, and one of them with a particularly distressed child who cries went completely ignored as the father stared curiously into the unibrow of a Frida Kahlo portrait.
Other gallery users were clearly irritated, but the babys parent seemed similarly disinterested, and he carried on from room to room, occasionally cooing at the crying baby. Cooing. Why would you take your babies to see Frida Kahlo, and coo at it like you were in your own home?
I have had similar experiences in other public places, most irritatingly in restaurants, coffee houses, bars, and once, irony of ironies, at a Quaker funeral. (Why do parents insist on taking their young children to church or worship?)
Now obviously there are perfectly understandable situations whereby the parent must bring the children with them to an event or an occasion, usually of the last-minute-couldnt-manage-a-babysitter variety. No problem. And obviously when children get to a certain, more coherent age, this sort of socialisation is important. But parents ought to realise that taking their young children certain places can be discomforting to other people who are there to engage in an adult pursuit, or may themselves be there to get away from their kids for a couple of hours.
I understand that there are many difficulties in raising young children, and any reasonable individual respects this. But it isnt everybody else' s responsibility to defer to parenthood and to accomodate your childrens' inappropriate behaviour, especially in adult environments.