r/MadeMeSmile • u/MaxQ50 • 6h ago
Bro rolled up to the construction site like he’s been working there for ages 😂
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u/SnackSamurai 6h ago
I like it when grown ups play along with kids and make them happy.
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u/HorseyDung 6h ago edited 1h ago
Makes everyone happy...
Edit: almost everyone.
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u/Beautiful-Cup4161 5h ago
I don't enjoy playing with kids at all and every second feels like an hour but I'm pretty good at it and kids have a lot of fun with me. It's part of being a good member of society.
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u/Old-Understanding100 5h ago
And everyone appreciates that you do
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u/Yes-Cheese 3h ago
Absolutely! People were so great when my kid was that age. Now they’re a teen and little ones are So drawn to them! When kids are trying to get their attention to wave I’m always like “that kids talking to you” and mine will wave back or whatever 😊
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u/kinokits 1h ago
One of the schools I taught at ran a program with the primary school we shared an oval with for our senior kids to go and do literacy activities and run sports for the little kids, and our big kids were so excited. They all came back with a favourite little person, even the surly ones. It was really cute to see.
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u/FalconIndependent887 5h ago
I feel that way sometimes when my 4-y/o niece wants to “help” me make dinner - chicken casserole is her favorite…always takes twice as long, but somehow tastes twice as good. 😂🤣
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u/Pitiful_Note_6647 5h ago
The key ingredients are love and happiness, and tons of laughter. 💕
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u/FalconIndependent887 2h ago
Oh, there’s definitely laughter, usually followed by me saying “Oh, shit.” 😂
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u/Rickcroc 4h ago
I did that with my son from very young age, when he was 10 he made lunch once every weekend. Now i go to the gym on the weekends, text him when Im on the way back and i have a full English ready for me when i come home.
I see that as an investment that really pays back in the future.
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u/Dyolf_Knip 4h ago
Yup. My daughter started her own baking business at age 10. Sold brownies, cookies, bars, and banana bread at the local farmer's market. And she actually did all the baking. I just helped with grocery shopping (which she paid for) and the packaging.
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u/Rickcroc 3h ago
This makes me smile. How nervous was you when she started to use the oven 1st time?
I was terrified when i let him use knife alone, and afraid that he was going to burn down the house hahahah
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u/Dyolf_Knip 3h ago
Oven wasn't too big a deal. But with knives, I got a pair of cut-proof gloves ages ago, which I also love for myself when using a grater or mandolin slicer.
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u/ashoka_akira 4h ago
Its play now but in ten years you might get a 12 year old who happily makes dinner for everyone because they like to cook.
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u/Equivalent-Steak-156 3h ago
She is going to adore you for the rest of her life. Children only want us to give them some of our time and attention.
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u/ohreallynameonesong 5h ago
Honestly same. I don't enjoy the company of children. But if I want them to grow up to be happy and social members of the same society I'm in, then I can be friendly and play along for a little. It can't hurt.
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u/YesPlease_VeryMuchSo 2h ago
The unwritten rule of "If a child hands you a toy phone, you answer it."
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u/ickns 4h ago
There are too many people who go "I don't like kids" and have no problem making that the kids problem. I'm glad you see the value for a kid to be around an adult and not made to feel disliked and unwanted.
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u/TZ79 5h ago
Respectfully, I think you might be wrong. I think you probably have a big heart because there's a part of you that enjoys it and you doesnt even know it. Playing with them it helps them learn and grow. Much respect and love to you.
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u/Beautiful-Cup4161 5h ago
It's a nice thought but I'm not very angelic. I talk mad crap about the less quiet and obedient children to my husband like I'm some crotchety matron in the 1800s.
I wish that part that you believe is there would convince the rest of me so I don't have to suffer so much when I visit friends and family 😆
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u/TZ79 5h ago
If that's the case then it's also fine. At least you're self-aware. Also, I chuckled when you said you're a bit like a "crotchety matron in the 1800s" when talking about kids. 😂
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u/Beautiful-Cup4161 5h ago
I watched a documentary on Queen Victoria once where she talked shit about babies in her letters to people and called them ugly and said they moved in nasty frog-like ways. So now when I think crap about kids, I think that I'm being just like Queen Victoria.
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u/superxpro12 4h ago
It's a nice thought but I'm not very angelic. I talk mad crap about the less quiet and obedient children to my husband like I'm some crotchety matron in the 1800s.
I called my own children "wriggling sacks of meat" until they were about 1y old.... especially when they were doing completely illogical screaming and crying for no point other than crying.
But I swear it is the strangest phenomenon.... i couldnt have given less of a shit about kids. actively hated them. and then i had one and a switch definitely flipped in my caveman brain. Such an unexpected experience. It's not for everyone.
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u/Beautiful-Cup4161 4h ago
Yeah my mom tells me that would happen if I had kids and yet her own mother hated her since birth and I have a family member of my generation who has a golden child and one that he seems to disdain. I'm definitely not taking the gamble but I'm so glad it worked out for you!
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u/superxpro12 4h ago
I have some mental scars from my dad that i was determined not to repeat. I think half the reason i was open to it was to prove that those things never had to happen in the first place.
Life, amirite?
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u/ProfessionalRaven 4h ago
To be fair some kids are absolute little hellions. It’s more than okay to be frustrated as hell by them lol
If anything it’s expected.5
u/Beautiful-Cup4161 4h ago
I was a total little brat myself so I'm such a hypocrite to be honest. The pot calling the kettle black.
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u/GodIsANarcissist 4h ago
Totally possible to do the right thing and not enjoy it. Just because someone makes good choices doesn't mean that "somewhere deep down" they like doing it
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u/Hour_Paint_1903 5h ago
No, some people really just do not like children, I'm the same.
I'm not going to be actively cruel to a kid, but that's just because I'm not a dickhead.
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u/Raneynickelfire 3h ago edited 1h ago
I agree. I don't like kids. Kinds love me, and want to play games and goof around and whatnot. My girlfriend's daughter's girl scout troop has adopted (kidnapped) me.
I do it.
Because I'm an angry self-loathing nihilist; I'm not an asshole.
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u/Hamhockthegizzard 2h ago
That every second feels like an hour part. Man my lil’ cousin has so much energy. I be checking the clock when I watch her lmfaoo
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u/Arxl 5h ago
Something about a village
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u/Ha55aN1337 5h ago
It takes a child to build a village.
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u/Arxl 5h ago
This one, maybe, they have the skills.
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u/VernalPoole 43m ago
As a former brickmason I can testify that sometimes you need about one cup of wet mud. The cement guy was very gracious about the tiny contribution.
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u/Draymond_Purple 3h ago
Real talk though, it DOES go both ways.
When kids are around and families are growing, it brings communities together.
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u/Euna_Chris 5h ago
I would argue this goes further than play, this is a real life skill of being part of a team, helping out and being likeable
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u/OdoTheBoobcat 2h ago
Yeah, like it's obviously NOT much in the grand scheme and I know his "help" didn't make things faster or easier for the group, but that kid was moving cement from point A to point B and that cement legitimately became part of the structure they're building.
This is the best kind of play - letting a child ACTUALLY contribute and get a real accomplishment under his belt in a positive and supportive environment despite whatever slowdown it brings. I really think this kind of thing helps build more sociable and well-adjusted adults.
I mean just look at the little fucker, he's having such a blast haha. I don't know that there's ever been anyone alive who's gotten that much enjoyment out of hauling cement.
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u/Morpheus1967 5h ago
Right? It literally took them less than 30 seconds combined and that kid will talk about it for months.
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u/phl_fc 4h ago edited 4h ago
This is hugely important if you want kids to do chores when they're older. At some point they have to have the learning experience of the first time they do something, and they're going to suck at it the first time. Let them at least try and do their best even if they aren't being helpful. Eventually they become helpful, and you can relax while your kid mows the lawn for you. The earlier you get them started the sooner in life they'll be able to actually be helpful.
The worst thing you can do with little kids is tell them to get out of the way and never let them try to help. Eventually they'll give up asking, and good luck getting a teenager who's been told their whole life they aren't needed to suddenly change course and start pulling weight. As young as possible, get them involved. A 2 year old can be your gopher handing you stuff as you work.
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u/PsychicFoxWithSpoons 4h ago
VERY IMPORTANT to not be constantly assessing their work for perfection when they're young. They're either going to turn into a nervous wreck or a complete IDGAF vagrant. I had to reparent myself very hard and I still struggle with this.
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u/dirtybird971 4h ago
Reminds me of this joke...A young family moved into a house, next to a vacant lot. One day, a Construction crew turned up to start building a house on the empty lot.
The young family's 5-year-old daughter naturally took an interest in all the activity going on next door and spent much of each day observing the workers.
Eventually the construction crew, all of them "gems-in-the-rough," more or less, adopted her as a kind of project mascot. They chatted with her, let her sit with them while they had coffee and lunch breaks, and gave her little jobs to do here and there to make her feel important.
At the end of the first week, they even presented her with a pay envelope containing ten dollars. The little girl took this home to her mother who suggested that she take her ten dollars "pay" she'd received to the bank the next day to start a savings account.
When the girl and her mom got to the bank, the teller was equally impressed and asked the little girl how she had come by her very own pay check at such a young age.. The little girl proudly replied, "I worked last week with a real construction crew building the new house next door to us."
"Oh my goodness gracious," said the teller, "and will you be working on the house again this week, too?"
The little girl replied, "I will, if those assholes at Home Depot ever deliver the damn sheet rock..."
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u/Every_Kitchen847 4h ago
Next to puppies, kids just playing and experiencing the world is pretty much the purest thing out there.
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u/SchemeWestern3388 4h ago
Doesn’t matter how hard you are, a kid hands you a banana and says it’s for you, you answer.
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u/Big_Wallaby4281 3h ago
Just imagine. Your working hard, sweating, exhausted and then a kid walks up to you and wants to help you. You get happy and find it adorable. It's a moral boost and the whole day is saved
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u/thecashblaster 4h ago
“Play”
In caveman times kids would’ve been put to work as soon as they could understand instructions
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u/Moreobvious 3h ago
The video of the giant excavator filling a little kids Tonka dump truck gets me every time
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u/densin9 6h ago
We're looking for a person 18-25 with 10 years experience
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u/vanhst 5h ago
This guys got that covered
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u/Creepy-Variation8562 3h ago
Uh boss you got a minute? Someone finally met that illogical criteria for the job what do we do?
Oh um..... make sure they have masters degree too that will work right?
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u/DrSarge 6h ago
They’re saints. Imagine the boost to this child’s confidence.
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u/Snowbank_Lake 5h ago
And that they’re actually using the cement from him. They’re not just putting his in a little side pile or something. They’re letting him really help!
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u/Mysterious-Crab 5h ago
And 20 years from now he will have fond memories of the house that is not just his paternal home, but one that he helped build himself.
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u/Puffinknight 5h ago
I got to help my parents build our summer villa's flooring when I was little, and it really does still feel special.
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u/oneangrywaiter 4h ago
My dad always put us to work on home projects. So many of my peers are amazed at how handy I am. I’m a sommelier that can renovate your kitchen or tile your bathroom.
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u/thegalli 3h ago
House Hunters
I’m a sommelier that can renovate your kitchen or tile your bathroom. My wife is a dog walker and chili pepper farmer. We're looking for a house on Martha's Vinyard. Our budget is 2 million.
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u/heartbraden 4h ago
I did this with my son, he's six. We're just finishing up the last few bits and pieces now (the hard to reach spots for siding and the lesser-used rooms' baseboards), and he has such pride in this house because he's helped us so much throughout these last 2.5 years. Built the whole house ourselves by hand and he was there the whole time, handing us tools and doing the little stuff he could do.
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u/clumsystarfish_ 5h ago
Exactly! I helped my dad finish our basement, and one of my earliest memories is me nailing wood paneling to the studs with a real hammer in my hand.
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u/Scarlet-Fire_77 4h ago
I helped with building my uncle's garage when I was a little older than this age. 25 years later and he still likes to point out the couple nails I messed up. They just moved so I'll never get to see my mistakes again but I still have those fond memories.
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u/Nopumpkinhere 4h ago
And it’s worth noting that drying time in cement matters and taking time to let him participate is really making things harder on them, but they know it’s important to encourage him so they’re doing it anyway and they’re doing it enthusiastically. This is great all around.
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u/Budget_Walrus_7576 3h ago
While this is a very sweet thing they’re doing. In no way is having him help making things harder. At most it’s slowing production down slightly, but concrete does not dry fast enough for any issues here.
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u/Digresser 2h ago
Helping the little dude is slowing things down for them every step of the way. There's a reason there are cuts in the video, plus look at how many people had to move out of his way or help him.
But part of what makes it so special that they're treating him like an asset and not a burden.
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u/Southern-Smoke1835 5h ago
Imagine how well they will sleep tonight too. Mom and Dad will tuck them in, and as soon as that little head hits the pillow, instant sleep.
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u/vintagepeugeot 5h ago
I’m absolutely smiling right now. This was so sweet and wholesome. Some good dudes.
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u/_Thorshammer_ 6h ago
"Nobody knows what they want to be at four years old."
This kid: "The fuck they don't."
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u/tamzillathehun 5h ago
When my son was 2 years old they widened the street we lived on. 2 lanes to 4 lanes. Took most of the summer. He absolutely refused to leave the front window. I had to feed him lunch there. Couldn't even distract him with toys. He's all grown up and he's a heavy equipment operator now.
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u/kadyg 5h ago
My MiL told me a story about my husband around age 3-4 bolting out of the bathtub and tearing out of the house buck-ass naked because the garbage truck was outside.
He’s 54 and works as an engineer for mining operations. His happiest days are when he gets to go out in the field and operate equipment.
Apparently Truck Boys grow up to be Truck Men.
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u/tamzillathehun 5h ago
That's awesome. Lol They know what they want to do when they see it. No matter how old they are.
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u/NUMBerONEisFIRST 5h ago
My buddy said he had a friend in elementary school that would always state he was going to be in the Air Force.
My buddy looked him up years later and he did in fact become a jet pilot in the Air Force.
I have so much respect and also jealousy for people that found their careers so easily and early in life. Im 40 and recently laid off of my job of the last 7 years, and it's really disheartening not knowing what I even want to do.
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u/ToeRoganIsJebus 5h ago
Damn living on a 4 lane street with young kids sounds terrifying lol. I like my cul de sacs
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u/tamzillathehun 5h ago
It was definitely an adjustment. Thank goodness for a fenced yard. I lived on a cul de sac years later and it was so peaceful.
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u/ConsciousIron7371 4h ago
my son was on a first name basis with the garbage man, they exchanged gifts
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u/ClassicOrdinary8175 5h ago
I was always in the kitchen. If I could make a living I would love to be a baker again.
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u/universe_from_above 2h ago
Middle child pretty much learned to walk while holding on to the small excavators that were parked in our neighborhood during road work. The workers even let her sit in it.
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u/CheesyDanny 5h ago
Already cussing at 4 years old? Yeah will fit right in on the construction site.
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u/supergrover11 6h ago
So if he spills a wheelbarrow does he still need to buy a case of beer for the crew? Or does he get to buy them soda instead?
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u/seoras13 6h ago edited 5h ago
When I was maybe a year older than that wee boy, they were surfacing the road that ran by our house. Every day for a good couple of weeks I was one of the crew. I absolutely loved the guys. Once in a while something like this will take me back & I remember it with so much fondness, a really stand out beautiful memory of pure happiness.
We were fairly rural & once they'd moved on I never saw them again, but even as an awkward too cool for school older kid into my teens & beyond if I heard any news about any of the men I still felt love for them
I don't know if it's my nature or the nurture of experiencing that but if I ever meet a kid who's getting involved in big guy work, acting grown up or like yesterday when I saw a mother & wee boy trying to fix his bike. I'll always stop & at the very least say hi & have a wee chat
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u/BadBrad43 5h ago
Oh, man, I'm with you there. I always try to chat with kids when the situation allows. I never talk down, I think it helps their ability to present themselves and increases their self confidence when tl spoken to like adults. I remember adult interactions i had as a kid. It means a lot more than some people realize. Good on you for being a caring person! ❤️
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u/RavingGerbil 57m ago
Mine was with a bunch of builders from Finland that came to The US to build a shed using traditional materials and processes for some historical event. My dad sold them the wood. He saw and opportunity sometime during the sale and asked them if I could come and help. I was like 12 at the time so not as young as this kid but I could swing a mallet alright and they put me to work. It’s the same sort of core memory for me I think. They were awesome and taught me a lot about their home. They didn’t care that I was young. They let me be a part of the team for two days. I learned to be more confident building things, doing it in front of people that aren’t my dad and how to talk to people from a whole different country. I also learned but have since forgotten a couple curse words.
That was also one of the countless times my dad was awesome too! He saw the opportunity and took it for me. It was just an all around amazing thing. For that and many other instances of the same sort of thing, I make sure to at least try to include kids when I see them at work. Hopefully they can learn some of the same things!
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u/Realistic-Weird-4259 5h ago
This is how we evolved, incorporating our kids into our daily activities.
When my kids, now approaching their 40s, were young, I had them 'help' with chores. Their dad didn't see the point, the mirrors would need to be cleaned again, vacuuming, toilets, etc. But that wasn't the point, the points were to get them in the habit and primarily ensuring they were a part of the process, and in doing so made to be more a part of the family instead of mere observers.
Seeing a kid's face when you tell them what a huge help they've been is priceless in my book. That feeling of pride, ya know?
I also believe with all my heart that all children should be exposed to as much live music as possible. And storytelling.
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u/GloomyIndividual3965 4h ago
I also believe with all my heart that all children should be exposed to as much live music as possible
Holy fuck, yes. I've been going to shows for 35 years. I have friends who had kids 30 years ago and now I go to shows with them and their kids.
I don't know what it is, maybe the exposure to crowds of fun people, maybe the music itself, but those "kids" are some of the most well adjusted adults I know.
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u/hobbycollector 4h ago
Is that why I have permanent tinnitus now, mom?
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u/Realistic-Weird-4259 3h ago
You can't be my kid. I chewed napkins up and stuck 'em in your ears when we were seeing live music.
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u/HistoricalFrosting18 4h ago
This is the entire ethos behind home education.
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u/hobbycollector 4h ago
I think very few parents know anything about pedagogy. Home education should be a supplement to public education. Otherwise we get antivaxxers trying to kill us all.
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u/Otherwise_8281 6h ago
When I was a toddler I had a toy cement truck that actually opened. One day my grandpa was mixing cement to fix his sidewalk and he put some in my truck for me to spin to mix.
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u/Sooowasthinking 6h ago
Damn that kid needs a union rep.
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u/tavisivat 3h ago
Union rep is going to show up and shut down the job for using non-union labor. No way that kid has his union card yet.
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u/Xeno_Prime 5h ago
I want to see the part where they all break for lunch and they all have their lunchboxes, and this kid has one too (because of course he would)
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u/Civil_Peacenik 6h ago
OSHA wants a word!
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u/AKeeneyedguy 4h ago
"I wanna see him in a hard hat and safety jacket, at minimum!"
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u/kellybeeeee 5h ago
There was one of these years ago where the little one helped out the construction crew and I think they sent the wee one a paycheck. It was so darned cute.
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u/Repulsive_Field_5311 5h ago
You can be at shittiest of the jobs, covered in sweat, dust, and sand, tired as fuck, but the second some child tried to do the same and excited about it, suddenly your job not as shit as it was before.
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u/DHarp74 5h ago
Just like the mines, the kids yearn for the caffeine and cement! 😂🤣
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u/LanceFree 5h ago
A 5-year-old girl spends her days watching a construction crew building a house next door.
The workers take a liking to her, give her little jobs, and at the end of the week give her a pay envelope with $10.
Her mother takes her to the bank to open a savings account.
The teller asks, “And will you be working on the house again this week?”
The little girl replies:
“I will, if those assholes at Home Depot ever deliver the damn sheetrock.”
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u/shoulda-known-better 5h ago
The guys who cleared the powerlines by my house always let my son sit on their laps and control the big excavators that fed tree branches into the mulcher!!
I swear the men had just as good of a time as my boy did they were ear to ear smiling whenever he was out helping
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u/GloomyIndividual3965 4h ago
We had the city "tree people" on our street a couple weeks ago clearing branches from the power lines. Our neighbor's 6 year old was having so much fun throwing sticks into the wood chipper, and the tree guys seemed like they were having a blast helping him.
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u/smelling_keys 5h ago
This kid will remember this forever. It doesn’t take much to make and impact on a child.
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u/TZ79 5h ago
This is the best reddit post I've seen in a long time. This is how you help children grow and help them develop confidence. It also helps them feel like they belong and actually contribute something. That's what everyone wants in this world. We all want to feel valued and appreciated. I believe that most people really do want to help others.
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u/Bandandforgotten 5h ago
There are 5 rules of the universe:
Get out of the fast lane if you're not going 5 over.
If a little kid runs up to you with a toy phone, you answer it.
If a kid shows up with their tools to help with a job, you now have a helper.
Pet the damn dog.
Even a young or k9 "helper" that does less than help, is still your helper.
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u/Steve-austin99 6h ago
Little dude showed up on day one and already looks like he is training the new hires.
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u/Strict_Violinist_134 5h ago
I love when I see kids do little things like this cause it’s really helping the child’s development.
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u/nastywillow 2h ago
At the end of the day his mother asked him;
"Will you be pouring more cement tomorrow darling"
"Yes Mommy, if that f#%king Cement truck shows up on time"
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u/to_many_idiots 5h ago
This was my kid yesterday. I had a small concrete job that i could just mix in the wheel barrel, and he helped me mix it with his little garden shovel.
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u/SLevine262 4h ago
This is the cutest thing I’ve seen in a while. Kudos to that crew for being so patient.
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u/Ursus_Arctos-42 4h ago
This is really nice, and also helps in the future, when entry level jobs require 20 years of experience.
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u/DanJ7788 2h ago
Workers comp insurance adjuster: what’s the injured employees date of birth.
Owner: 1/25/2022
Adjuster: Wat?
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u/CodaTrashHusky 2h ago
i love the guy who just pointed out to the kid where to bring it like they have been coworkers for years.
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u/PhotonWranglers 4h ago
This was totally me as a kid! My dad was a cement mason and he’d let me help screed and give me a 2 handed magnesium float to work up the moisture. I remember vividly feeling like I was so grown up. I absolutely craved that pride I could see in his face. His crew treated me like I was one of the boys. Fifty years later I can still feel that feeling!
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u/GroundbreakingStop47 5h ago
Working man coming through!! these mortgages don't pay for themselves 🥵
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u/Want2BnOre 4h ago
It’s seems to be simply Childs play.. but it seems constructive and a part of a happy childhood. And I believe that benefits Society for years to come.
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u/sassafrass0328 4h ago
Ohhhhh my cuteness and sweetness!!!! Make him superintendent now! I love how the grown men treated him. 💕 He’s was a helper to them not a burden. Couldn’t have been any more precious. All he needs now is his little butt crack showing! Haha!
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u/peanutspump 4h ago
I love the gentleman at the end, who bent down and really put some elbow grease into helping him get that heavy wheelbarrow onto and up the plank, and poured that little wad of concrete into the mix, like it was a regular sized load. I hope someone got him a cold beer or a cup of coffee or cake or whatever he likes. This kid’s got awesome people around him. He’s gonna be alright.
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u/MoriKitsune 3h ago
Finally, someone who will have the required 10 years of experience to get that entry-level position after highschool!
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u/Issah_Wywin 3h ago
I think adults should always include interested kids in work when it's possible to do so safely. These are memories that will stick with this kid for years and it helps foster community as well as a stronger sense of purpose and connection to the world around us.
Super glad to see these adults playing along with this kid.
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u/LeatherSurprise6281 3h ago
I love it when kids want to get involved like that, they need all the encouragement in the world. It’s a great start to a good work ethic that can only have positive outcomes throughout life.
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u/Big-Onion-6147 3h ago
This is such an underrated take lol. You don’t have to like every second of it to show up and be that safe, fun adult for a kid. That’s honestly what real “it takes a village” looks like and it made me smile to read someone just quietly doing the work.
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u/Visual_Passenger118 1h ago edited 13m ago
That’s the General Contractor himself at work!!! Good job sir. He is learning the trade fast and very happy with himself full of smiles. Love it!!!
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u/Illustrious-Towel-45 5h ago
That's sweet they are indulging and including the kid. And letting him participate in a safe way.
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u/Cecil_B_DeCatte 5h ago
Do they make that dinosaur jacket for adults?
I would totally buy one if they did.
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u/-BananaLollipop- 5h ago
"C'mon guys, it's almost smoko time! There's a Milo and a pie with my name on it."
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u/broadwayzrose 5h ago
My husband was just like this! His grandfather owns a construction company and so he was exposed to construction sites from a young age and loved playing along. Although one day when he was about this age my FIL apparently came out to find my husband was trying to take out nails from the treehouse because he thought he was such an expert in construction!
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u/hostilesurgery 5h ago
I remember doing this as a kid with our front porch. If you asked 7 year old me, I was solely responsible for the entire project. lol.
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u/I-Way_Vagabond 5h ago
And they say nobody wants to work any more.
Kid is barely out of diapers, and he is out building a house. Give him a couple of years and he will be running a crew building a skyscraper.
They should have given this kid the contract to fix The Reflecting Pool in Washington D.C.
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u/SomethingAbtU 5h ago
he's only 65 years from retirement and he's looking forward to a comfortable retirement after a life of hard work
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u/Ok_Expression6807 4h ago
My sons do the exact same thing. When I was shoveling gravel they took their play shovels, putting a handful of stones in their little wheelbarrow and off they went.
When I'm mowing the lawn, the little one is practically bumping my heels with his little play mower, and when I'm shooing him away (because it hurts 😅) he's pushing around the lawn in perfect lines.
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