I love learning about how babies are raised in different cultures. This article talks about babies napping outdoors in Nordic countries.
We have cold winters here, and I love baby-wearing outdoors in the winter. Looking forward to doing that again. My son loved being out in the freezing cold, next to my body when a newborn.
https://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-21537988
Re: Babies napping in sub-zero temperatures
https://m.thelocal.com/20110817/35592
Someone who doesn't want their kid to be taken away, kidnapped, or car jacked. That exact scenario happened recently. The baby was later found abandoned by a jogging trail, where the carjacker dumped her.
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I absolutely think about this too. People have taken fear mongering to the next level. I recently read this article:
https://www.salon.com/2014/06/03/the_day_i_left_my_son_in_the_car/
(Child lives and is fine.) But it shows how extreme people and the courts have become and seem to have lost some common sense.

<p align="center"Also I have been reading that leaving kids in their car seats is less optimal then baby wearing for a number of reasons. Seems as though some of the same concerns would apply here with time in prams.
https://onyababy.com/2012/06/benefits-of-babywearing-vs-carseat-carrying/
Last thought...here in CO we joke about all the warm weather transplants who don't know how to drive in the snow/weather. With highly diverse climate zones in the US and worker mobility it seems as though the chance for bad decisions/mistakes goes way up.
ETA: @CrazyMonkeyBear you take the baby from the car seat, carry him/her inside to pay, then buckle baby back in when you're done. Every single time.
It is not nearly as common to have your kids taken over there. People don't worry about it as much, and everyone watches out for eachothers kids. It's actually comforting knowing my kids are safe, (to an extent) with a "stranger" watching.
I've heard Canada wad the same.
It's not just abduction to be feared. How would you feel if someone ran into your vehicle while you were in the store, injuring your baby? My dad's car was hit at a gas pump, luckily no one was inside and it missed the pump by inches. My dad was holding the gas nozzle at the time and was able to move it out of the way. Or what if there is a long line and you run into someone you haven't seen in a while? Hot car?
I also live in a small, safe community. That didn't stop a girl in my husband's class from being abducted in the fifth grade as she rode her bike home from school. We will allow bike rides at that age, reasonable distances and with phone calls on arrival.
It is so easy to bring a baby into the gas station, especially when you compare it to the possible anguish over a very preventable tragedy.
That being said, the gas station by my home has a cash pay window which I have used. There is a pump directly across from it, and I always have exact change when I use it. (I do not consider this leaving my son alone because I am mere steps from the car with no barriers.)
I do not consider myself a paranoid parent. I am very laid back in most of my methods. This is the one thing I stick on. Well, other than not giving my child pop, but that's for another thread.
As far as leaving your baby in the car, no. I am generally not a fear-mongerer, but that is a risk I choose not to take.
I've read that Salon article linked above by @motherboy, and while I would not have called the cops on that lady, I probably would have waited outside near the car to make sure the kid was ok until she got back. Yes, it might be a slight inconvenience to take your child with you inside, but I just don't feel comfortable leaving DS in the car unattended.
Here are some statistics on it from 1979-1984, when I was a baby:
https://www.nhtsa.gov/cars/rules/regrev/evaluate/806890.html
Yes, if my parents didn't have me properly strapped into a car seat, I really am lucky that I survived when they were in an accident. Improper use of carseats is another risk that I just don't see the benefit of taking.
I have never and probably would never leave my kid in the car to slap a 20 down on the coubter, but I can see why parents do or would want to. Everything in life carries risks and I do think the culture of parenting in America is getting slightly obsessive about danger and safety. I know my kids won't get to experience some of the freedom I had as a kid growing up, and i feel a little sad about that.

<p align="center"I left LO in the car once while I was having trouble with the pump and I need them to authorize it manually. There was no one else at the station- it was 6:30 am.
I have also left him in the car on our own driveway many times, while I ran back into the house to get something.
Other then that, I bring him with me. Is it ideal? No. It sucks in the winter. but you do what you gotta do. I also just usually pay with my card at the pump.
No I don't leave him in the car- but as he has gotten older I have found ways to foster his independence and freedom. I let him go to friends houses and play, and I don't helicopter around him. So, I guess in my world if I have to take away a nostalgic childhood memory I would rather take away leaving a kid in the car, then having the freedom to go play with friends when they want.
A kiss he will never forget- Disney World 2014
A kiss he will never forget- Disney World 2014