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#1 Posted : 10 April 2007 13:05:00(UTC)
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Posted By L. Leah
I was stood in the kitchen the other day making dinner when my six year old little boy stood next to me and told me he was about to make a "safe" paper airplane. I looked at him a little bemused and asked him to explain. "You see mummy, Mrs *** says that it is dangerous to play with paper airplanes as you might take someone's eye out with the pointy end." I was amazed that the lengths schools will go to in the name of health and safety, so I stopped cooking, got on my soap box and told him exactly what I thought of this teacher, and that obviously he shouldn't throw thim in the class room, or at people etc. and proceeded to say you "go ahead and make a paper airplane and show me how good it can fly". My little lad has had several variations on a theme for his paper airplanes and has perfected his technique now. TO start with he was a little stunned and tried to say that "it was OK", he was happy cutting the points off the ends. Again, soap box out... "Have you ever seen a real airplane with no pointy nose?" "Do you know how many people, man hours, how much education etc went into perfecting the airplane as we know it?" I replied. (you get the idea!)

Anyway, he turned away to make his "best ever" paper airplane and proceded to throw it. Me having returned back to the dinner, did not see it and he insisted I stop cooking, go down to the bottom of the hall whilst he prepared to throw it the full length of the kitchen and hall way.

At this point, my four year old daughter entered the kitchen and proceeded to join in with the spectator activities. She stood on the hall floor, whilst I took up my viewing point on the third stair hanging over the banister.

1, 2, 3 and the plane is launched.... and hit my daughter square in the corner of her eye!

Perhaps the school has a point after all!
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#2 Posted : 10 April 2007 14:19:00(UTC)
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Posted By Sally
Murphy's law - anything that can go wrong will go wrong.

Can I assume that you now ensure that both your children wear eye protection at all times whilst in the house as your accident trends show that there is a risk of eye injury.







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#3 Posted : 10 April 2007 14:41:00(UTC)
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Posted By L. Leah
Of course, I have learnt from my mistakes, have conducted a full risk assessment concerning having children, and have decided to ban all games and toys etc, especially friends... just too much of a risk!
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#4 Posted : 10 April 2007 14:51:00(UTC)
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Posted By Chris Packham
What you do not say is what the outcome of the paper plane hitting your daughter in the eye was. How long did the ambulance take to arrive and what action did the para-medics take?

Chris
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#5 Posted : 10 April 2007 14:54:00(UTC)
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Posted By L. Leah
Unfortunately, I could not tend to her injury as I was too busy crying laughing, obviously being four years old she didn't see the irony of the situation and ran off crying to her dad!

Lessons have been learnt though by my son, paper airplanes do fly better with pointy noses!
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#6 Posted : 10 April 2007 15:31:00(UTC)
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Posted By Chris Packham
Now I know why they took Concorde out of service. Everything else was just a smokescreen. Obviously it was the pointy nose!

Chris
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#7 Posted : 10 April 2007 15:42:00(UTC)
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Posted By Robert K Lewis
L

You need to practice risk export - Give the kids away for someone else to worry about!:-)

Bob
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#8 Posted : 10 April 2007 15:55:00(UTC)
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Posted By L. Leah
I would have tried that, but social services have rules about that kind of thing, all very inconvenient really!
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#9 Posted : 10 April 2007 16:09:00(UTC)
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Posted By holmezy

what are you doing allowing your kids to play? Haven't you got any chimneys that need cleaning?
Perhaps next time you could incorporate thier playtime into your cooking requirements with games like;

who can peel the best potato?
First one to find 20 peas in a single pod wins?


etc, etc, etc

the best one I can remember was;

who can get the plates the cleanest using only hot water, washing up liquid and a small sponge?

Oh the joys of childhood.

Not got kids myself so this is all a mystery to me.

Holmezy
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#10 Posted : 11 April 2007 11:18:00(UTC)
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Posted By Tabs
What happened to the duck reflex?

Obviously you should expose your children to MORE risks to develop the basic human skills of ducking objects!

Perhaps medicine balls being hurled at them would help (my PE teacher thought it would help me in some bizarre ritual torture he devised).

Thanks for the chuckle, I hope the teachers don't get to hear about your episode, or your family will become folklore very quickly.

I trust both have recovered the ordeal of seeing their mother delight in the accident, hee hee...
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#11 Posted : 12 April 2007 00:59:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ken Taylor
The teachers used to throw wooden dusters (for removing chalk from blackboards) about in my school days. Fortunately they were pointless.
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#12 Posted : 12 April 2007 07:26:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dave West
i suggest you risk assess your childrens play activities straight away, remove the wheels off all your sons cars to eliminate the risk of entanglement and blunten the ends of the sticks in your childrens KERPLUNK game:-)
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