Thursday, May 2, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Mom's Facebook Apology Garners Thousands 'Likes'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 31 Mar, 2015 03:03 PM
    Alabama resident Kyesha Smith Wood's apology through a public post on Facebook for her daughter and stepdaughter's bad behaviour at a movie theatre has garnered much appreciation from all quarters.
     
    When Kyesha Smith Wood learned that her daughter and stepdaughter reportedly were disruptive at a recent movie screening, she issued a public Facebook apology for their "rude and obnoxious" behaviour, Today.com reported.
     
    According to Wood's March 28 Facebook post, her public social media message was a "long shot" to apologise to a woman who'd asked the girls to quiet down.
     
    "After the movie she approached my girls and told them that her husband had been laid off and this was the last movie she would be able to take her daughter to for a while and my girls ruined that for her," Wood wrote.
     
     
    "If you are this woman, please message me. I can assure you that these girls are being strongly dealt with and appropriately punished.
     
    "This rude, disrespectful, and awful behaviour is unacceptable and they owe you an apology.
     
    "[We] would like to pay for your next movie and snacks out of their allowance," Wood wrote.
     
    That version of the post has been shared almost 2,000 times, and many commenters beneath that post hailed the mom for her apology and follow-up gesture.
     
    "Here is a lady properly handling things. I am so glad and proud to call you my neighbour Kyesha Smith Wood," commenter Carolyn Tinker Dickey noted.
     
    Another well-liked comment came from Facebook user Cary Burch, who wrote, "Parenting. You're doing it right."
     
    The Jefferson County Sheriff's office re-posted it on its own page, where it went on to collect more than 250,000 'likes' and nearly 50,000 'shares' in the 48 hours that followed.
     
     
    As word spread, Rebecca Boyd of Adger, Alabama, claimed to be the woman who'd approached the girls in the theatre.
     
    "After I read [Wood's apology], I was touched that she cared how her kids behaved," Boyd said, according to the Alabama news website AL.com.
     
    "You don't see that a lot these days," she added.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Informal Email Address Hampers Your Hiring Chances

    Informal Email Address Hampers Your Hiring Chances
    An applicant's email address can greatly impact first impressions and affect one's chances of getting hired, according to a new study.

    Informal Email Address Hampers Your Hiring Chances

    Better Breakfast Leads To Higher Grades In Schools

    Better Breakfast Leads To Higher Grades In Schools
    Reinforcing the connection between good nutrition and good grades, researchers have found that free school breakfasts help students from low-income families perform better academically.

    Better Breakfast Leads To Higher Grades In Schools

    In Battle For Booming Us Coffee Pod Market, It's Giant Keurig Vs. The Recyclables

    In Battle For Booming Us Coffee Pod Market, It's Giant Keurig Vs. The Recyclables
    LINCOLN, Calif. — One measure of how heated the environmental battle has become over coffee giant Keurig Green Mountain's $5 billion-a-year plastic pods is how often the company's opponents use galactic comparisons.

    In Battle For Booming Us Coffee Pod Market, It's Giant Keurig Vs. The Recyclables

    Watching Porn Could Improve Your Sex Life

    Watching Porn Could Improve Your Sex Life
    Watching porn can actually enhance sexual arousal and is unlikely to cause erectile problems, a study from the University of California, Los Angeles and Concordia University has revealed.

    Watching Porn Could Improve Your Sex Life

    TV Recipes Not Healthy: Survey

    TV Recipes Not Healthy: Survey
    If you source your recipes from TV, you are likely to weigh about 11 pounds more than if you watch cooking shows for entertainment and do not often cook, finds a study.

    TV Recipes Not Healthy: Survey

    Ask a Designer: Using black to bring out the beauty of other neutral colours

    Ask a Designer: Using black to bring out the beauty of other neutral colours
    There are plenty of practical reasons to decorate with neutral colours. The shades we think of as neutral — whites, beiges, tans — don't clash with anything. They are calm, soothing and never go out of style. There's just one problem. "Beiges and neutrals," says designer Brian Patrick Flynn, "can be super boring."

    Ask a Designer: Using black to bring out the beauty of other neutral colours