when a stranger comments on your child? When someone asks how old my DS is, and I tell them he's 14 months, I get "oh I bet he's getting into everything!" or "is he walking yet?" It's heartbreaking. No, he's not walking. He's not even crawling. How do you respond when someone doesn't know what is going on? how do you let it not tear you down? I'm typically okay at home, and then we leave the house and I get asked that question or I see a child his age doing so much more than he does, and it hurts.
Re: How do you handle...
"Is he walking yet?"
"Soon, we hope."
"He must be getting into everything!"
"You know how it is!" or "He IS 14 months!" or "How'd you guess?"
"How's walking/talking/anything coming?"
"It's coming along."
Questions about differences they notice?
Smile, and ask sweetly, "Why do you ask?" Turn strangers' noseiness back around on them.
If they ask specific questions about your child's health or medical status, "That's rather personal, don't you think?" or "We prefer to keep that type of personal information private.
Don't be afraid to call attention to others' rudeness. They ask because they hope you'll be uncomfortable enough to answer, but you are under no obligation to do so.
I have a lot of experience with this. You'd be surprised what people will ask when a child's adopted. They key is guaging whether the person is just unaware and making conversation or knowingly prying.
I usually just smile and say, "Yup. He's big." And then turn the conversation back around to something he's really into or excels at.
I find that changing the topic to one that let's you brag about your child or focus on their amazing qualities is a great way to direct the conversation away from the uncomfortable and to something that gives the commenter a footing into other, more positive small talk.
Y
I'm a fan of The Cloth Diaper Tech Support group on Facebook