What we don't know is how many people who signed that petition are parents themselves. And the majority of the parents I connected with following the tragedy have an entirely different view. These parents have instead been reflecting on how they could have just as easily found themselves in a situation like this one.
"I'm just glad on the most serious occasion, he had the sense to seek out a security guard and not jump through fences and into an animal enclosure," Bishop said. "Kids are going to explore, we know that ... so they will get where they're not supposed to go. They just will."
It is during those minutes, or seconds, of distraction, inattention or daydreaming that your life can go terribly wrong. My moment occurred when my younger daughter was 2 or 3 -- a traumatizing memory I hate to remember. She was playing in a lake and in hindsight, I know I was standing way too far from the water. My husband, my mother-in-law and I were chatting, and I got distracted. The next thing I knew, she was head down in the water.
Those next few seconds were the longest of my life. Thankfully, she was okay, but that moment could have easily had a very different ending.
"Every single parent can think of a time when something scary (or) unfortunate happened to their child," said Nikki Little, a mother of 3-year-old twin boys and an account director in social media for a public relations firm. "It is not humanly possible to watch your child every single, waking second of the day."
The whole zoo had to be shut down while officials searched for him. Luckily, he was found in a park going up and down a slide and not in an animal cage, she recalled.
"Things happen in a blink of an eye when you are a parent and unfortunately this little child ran off to an incredibly dangerous place and not to a park," said Sharick, who said she feels enormous empathy for both the gorilla that was killed and the mother of the little boy.
Should parents be held accountable?
We are all susceptible to distractions and mistakes. At the same time, we also have a responsibility to avoid decisions, such as leaving young children home alone or letting them run freely in the street, that put our kids in harm's way.
If the mother is found to have acted in a negligent manner under the law, where she could have reasonably anticipated the danger and done something to prevent it from happening, she should be held accountable, some parents said. So should any of us if we find ourselves in a similar scenario.
Kelli Arena, a mother of three in Houston, has no interest in judging the parenting skills of the mother in question, but she does believe there should at least be a financial penalty. Arena wondered how long the child was maneuvering his way toward the enclosure. After asking the opinion of a friend who has experience working at zoos, she got the sense that it would have taken the boy some time to land where he did.
'Why do we have to place blame on anyone?'
What struck me and other parents was just how quickly we as a society want, or need, to assign blame -- and why we're so quick to toss blame at the parents, especially the mother.
In some ways, modern parents face a no-win situation: we're often blamed for being too protective and messing up our kids and society, or else for being too lax and doing equal damage.
"Why do we have to place blame on anyone? Something happened. Why do we have to place value on whether someone was right or wrong or "good" or "bad"? said Sharon Kennedy, a mom of two girls who are 7 and 9. "I feel like we are all guilty of creating even more pain for ourselves, for the families that go through such tragedies ... rather than just focusing on how to effectively keep this from happening again."
The boy in question does have a father, but most of the vitriol appears to be targeting the boy's mother.
"Parents can't win, particularly moms," Le Roy said.
'Shame Nation'
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People have no doubt been judging parents for decades, but what's different today is that a modern parenting mistake can get attention beyond your family or community. It can go viral.
In what she describes as "Shame Nation," she highlights how many parents now judge other parents as if they've never made their own mistakes.
"We have all had our 'oops' moments," she wrote. "Thankfully, they were in prior virtual reality times."
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