What would you have done?
At 21 months DD was the youngest child at a BBQ we went to last night. She made it clear she wanted to go down to the lawn to play with all the other kids so DH went with her. Anyway as it does with kids when they run around together, the play got a little rough. Nothing serious, just DD getting tugged around and falling over a lot because she always had someone hanging onto her. DH and I both held our breath when DD followed 2 of the girls (about 3-4 years old) to the enclosed trampoline. I didn't think she'd get up there with them, but she did. They'd all hold hands and of course DD would be the first to fall, so down they'd all go, then help DD up, jump once or twice and down she'd go again.
Anyway, DH wasn't happy with how 'rough' the play was or with her being on the trampoline, but he wasn't willing to step in anymore than I was. DD was laughing the whole time and any sign that she wasn't enjoying herself and I would've jumped in. I kept saying to DH, "Listen to her, she's laughing. She's not even looking our way for help. She doesn't get to play with other kids outside of daycare very often, just let her go. If it goes wrong, we're right here". I was reminding myself as much as him, but it hurt when he told me I obviously didn't care. I did step in when they were trying to help DD climb down from the trampoline (one of the girls looked like she was going to drag her out, but I knew DD would be too heavy for her). That was the only time DD cried the entire night - when Mum came over to say fun's over. We also kept her close by us for the rest of night, because by then the older kids (9-12 year olds) were out playing too.
The thing is, DD seems to have the good mix of curiosity and caution. If she's unsure of something, she's happy to sit and watch and suss it out before giving it a go. Also, she weighs 14kg so it's not like she's a slight little thing that other children would find easy to pick up or drag around.
I think this is more of an issue between DH and I and how we parent. Sometimes, I wish he'd be a bit more involved so that he could know what our daughter is like and trust her judgement (with our guidance of course, but not our control). I don't want her to be shy like me or anti-social like him. And I don't want to be over-protective and pass to her our caution as fear.
Did I do the right thing by letting her go under a watchful eye, ready to pounce if it all went wrong? Or was I wrong to leave her in a situation where she could have potentially been hurt? Where was I to draw the line?
Please be gentle with me.