Playing Outside?

Ugh, I have to type this all over again!

Anyway, here's my question. I have a 3-year-old son, who will be 4 in December. When is it safe to let him play outside alone?

My mother keeps telling me it's fine. We live in my old hometown (small - less than 2000 people). I rent a small house with a fenced in back yard (chainlink not privacy, but it's pretty sturdy). I remember playing outside alone or with friends when I was 3, maybe even younger, but I just feel uneasy about letting my son out alone. We don't have any swimming pools, trampoline's or old well's in the backyard... but I'm afraid he'll wander off or get snatched.

We've never had a kidnapping here, and murders are extremely rare (I could count all the ones that happened in my life on one hand)... but still! Am I just being paranoid? Is my mom right? Or have times changed, and I'm being sensible? I don't want to be babying my son too much... but I'm scared!

2007-10-24T21:34:28Z

Thanks for all the answers so far. A few more details.

There are things in the yard to play with. There's a plastic castle house thing with a small slide. There's a swing set too, and he has balls and stuff.

I also don't have a problem taking him outside to play and read out there, or do yard work, or whatever. My question is really about when I cannot be out there with him. When I'm cleaning the house, or doing homework (I'm in grad school two nights a week on top of working), or something like that I have him playing inside with me.

Denise S2007-10-24T19:35:30Z

Favorite Answer

If your gut instinct is to not let him play outside alone, then don't. At 3, most kids aren't very good at recognizing dangerous situations. They can't gauge height or depth very well, and are often not shy about talking to strangers. They also aren't very good at staying where you tell them to :) My children were about 6 when I felt safe letting them play outside with a group of neighborhood children of different ages, so long as I could see them. We lived in a very small town.. right after we moved, they had their first kidnapping. Not to scare you, but usually a mother's intuition is correct.

Anonymous2016-04-10T07:29:36Z

I have a 9 year old son and a 7 year old daughter. My son loves to be in our backyard, it's big enough so he can ride his bike around, he can play with balls, he has trucks, toys, we have a trampoline. My daughter though, will only play outside for like an hour at a time. She says she wants to come inside, she's bored, she doesn't like the grass etc. What I usually do is let her come inside for like 10 minutes, tell her either she plays outside, or she can come inside and sit in the office I have and stare at a wall. There's absolutely nothing to do in the office, there's a computer she doesn't know how to use, a bed, an empty dresser for guests, and a lamp and some of my books. Usually, she picks outside, because she has Barbies, she has balls, the slide, swing set, the trampoline. And once she starts doing something she likes, she'll stay out there for hours at a time. I would give your daughter either the choice of going outside and doing whatever she wants to do, or she can stay inside and do nothing at all, not even touch a doll.

LittleBarb2007-10-24T17:12:15Z

It is a VERY sad state of affairs in this country when we have to ASK when our children are safe playing outside alone. I remember being 4 and 5 and playing ALL DAY long outside alone (only girl in the family) and we had NO fenced yard, didn't worry about our neighbors or strangers and kidnapping was just unheard of at that time. How sad it is no longer safe to go outside and play.... IF you send your child out in the fenced yard without anything to play WITH, then he will surely try to FIND something to play with outside the boundries of the fence... I would TEST him out a few times... send him out and sit and watch him through a window nearest the yard.... make sure he KNOWS he is not to leave the yard.... but if you have to leave the window for whatever reason, then the child should come inside until you can be back watching again... do this for maybe a week or two until you can trust that he has listened to you about not leaving the yard... but after that, check on him OFTEN... I'd also teach him about STRANGER DANGER ---and give him permission to SCREAM as loud as he can if a stranger comes near him while he is IN the yard alone. if you TEACH the child to be careful, he will be. Thing is, you can't keep your eyes on them 100% of the time no matter WHAT you do....and eventually you WILL have to let them go out and explore...

♠ THAT GIRL ♠2007-10-24T17:19:04Z

Don't let him out alone unless he cannot get out of that fence and you are 1,000,000% certain nobody can get in. It doesn't matter how small your town is or what has never happened there. "I never thought it would happen to me" are not the words you want to say.
My son is 4 and will be 5 in March. My friend lets her son that is the same age run all over the place. She makes fun of me for following my son the way that I do...but I always know where my son is, what he is doing and who he is talking to...and he always knows I am there to keep him safe and that he can count on me. I do not hover but I am always right there.
When your mother says those things, I want you to say this in your head... "whatever"....and then do the right thing.
Please get a copy of the DVD "Stranger Danger" at WalMart. It might be called "Safe Side Super Chick" I am not sure which. It is by John Walsh and the Baby Einstein lady. It is a great tool for teaching and learning what to do with strangers. It has been a blessing for us. All I have to say is "this place is full of 'don't knows'" and my son stays right with me. It is a must have for any parent.

l_nehs2007-10-24T17:18:48Z

Honestly, there is no right answer for this question. Truth is that you and only you know what's best for your son. It's not an issue of how safe your neighborhood is or anything like that, because you know you wouldn't want to be that next victim. If you have a fenced in yard it is probably hard for him to get out, if there is a latch then find a way to secure it and make sure he can't find a place to crawl under it, but if you feel more comfortable watching him while he's playing then do it. If you need to do things while he's playing, make a space for yourself- table for your taxes or a cozy chair for reading! Or find things to do that are close to the windows in your backyard where you can see out and open it to hear him playing! My mom always had a window close to her open when we were outside or she worked on her papers on the patio table and we weren't aloud out until we asked. It was just her way, but don't fret over whether or not you are babying him by keeping an eye on him! He's your son! Of course you are going to want to know he is safe!

Show more answers (7)