I always almost order from the kids menu because a lot of the time it’s the only menu that has stuff on it I like and one time I ordered from it and I was told I couldn’t because I wasn’t 12 or under and she didn’t care that it was the only menu that had something I’d eat, I don’t get to chose which restaurants we go to sadly and 99.9% of the time it’s a seafood place even though I don’t like seafood so the kids menu is the only option I have so I could eat and when seafood places serve chicken tenders it tastes like fish to me so I was ordering a grilled cheese but nope wasn’t allowed to according to the waiter so I had to force myself to eat chicken tenders that tasted like fish. Restaurants need a menu for people who are picky or have food sensitivity’s or just let us order from the kids menu even if we are adults.
Edit: Dont read this comment I was cringe in the past and over-exaggerating my little brother being smart 💀 … I warned you 😃 Funny enough, my little brother is 7(8 now turning 9) and he know addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions, sqaurute, powered by, and negative and positive! Idk HOW he's so good with math- he asked me what -10 x -10 is and i thought it was -100 but it was 100! He knows somethings about e, i, pie, infinity, and cos and sin! Idk what that even isss!!!
@@Iya_Sparkley 7 year old brother sometimes even forgets basic multiplication of 1to 10 and he is 7 years and is in third class and will be 8 years in less than 30 days on starting august. And after all that my parents have audacity to compare him and his grades to me who is in 8th and let me tell u, i was smarter than my brother in 3rd class atleast if not actually smart for 3rd grader. I feel disappointed that my 7 year old brother is like that stupid in 3rd class compared to when i used to be in 3rd.
One time when my dad lied about me being 5 years old, so I could use public transport for free, I screamed out loud that I was 6. Luckily, the worker acted like he didn't hear anything and walked away. My dad then proceeded to ask me why I did that. I responded with "you told me lying was bad and to always be honest". He obviously had mixed feelings about that then lol.
Seriously, why don't parents have an honest discussion about this with their kids? I didn't know that the stakes were free food! I just knew that I worked hard to get my ripe old age of 8, and you weren't going to take that away from me!
@@mjangelvortex I wish I had a baby face. I think my family just insisted, and the person managing the tickets didn't care. There was a big group of us, and I kept my back turned. (I'm not short either.) Ask and you shall receive 😅
I have to almost force to buy adult tickets sometimes because i apparantly look «no older than 13» im 25😭 i know i have a babyface and am 5’’ but why would i lie to pay more like
My Dutch mom made me fib about my age so I could go on the bus for free (we weren't well off) and when the driver asked me how old I was I said "I'm 2 when I'm on the bus, but 3 at home" 😅 (cut off is at 3) He laughed and let me on for free regardless as he understood why. Bless him
I hope that man is doing okay. . . I was always, ALWAYS short money to get on the bus. They always let me through because there's no f*cking way you can get home anyways.
@@jenoseyessmile I have a friend who is a semi bilingual English learner and I'm a semi bilingual Spanish learner, we have conversations where he almost only replies in spanish and I almost only reply in English because it's easy for us 😹 its like a magic power
bruh that’s so common for literally any immigrant parent. anyone who speaks another language and understands english but doesn’t speak it will do this.
I was once on a bus. A parent with a kid got on. The bus driver asked the kid how old he was and he said "I'm 7, but I'll turn 8 when I get off the bus."
I once travelled on the train with my parents when I was 2,5. I was a stubborn little kid who didn't like to be told what I could and couldn't be or do. Kids under four rode for free so my dad told the inspector "she's not four yet" and me being the stubborn little shit I was said "I AM four". My parents ended up having to buy a ticket for me 😆
@@chhavigoyal3447 My little brother was born in 2005 and became a legal adult this year, and I’m still shook. Of course, lots of boomers, meanwhile, are still out here complaining about those dang millennial kids as if even the youngest among us aren’t pushing 30.
My mum made me do this before and i was short enough to make the cashier person think i was 4 years younger than i was at the time 💀😭 Holy crap it hasn’t even been a day yet and i have 1.3k likes?!
Omg Kumon 😂😂😂That cracked me up (For those of you who don’t know, Kumon is a franchise tutoring service that used to be very popular in Korea back in the day)
My family used to go to a hotpot restaurant that had discounts for kids under 140 cm. At that time I was like 146 cm and my mom told me to wear flat heeled shoes and a long dress so I could discretely slouch and crouch down a little so I look shorter. It actually worked lol although it did hurt my self esteem to pretend to be short at the time (my mom is really tall and wants me to be tall too)
@@MarianaSilva-ul5fy I'll have to concede that while not all those who did Kumon as kids are Koreans, but if you're Korean you definitely did Kumon as a kid.
@@breadxiaoyi5956 black swan problem aside, Kumon among Korean kids is still far more common than sweatshop labor and pre-adulthood entrepreneurship among Chinese kids.
@breadxiaoyi5956 ahhh that makes sense too, my bad! Should have caught on that it could have been a good natured joke. But the thing is that pretty much all Korean parents actually make their kids do Kumon or similar forms of learning program outside of school from early on. You'd be really hard pressed to find exceptions.
As a short person who is not Korean this is very very very relatable. Especially the excitement after the person is just not willing to put up a argument. It truly is embarassing. This was so well done and hilarious. 😂
As a shortish person who is korean living in the states, we did this all the time. The cheap Korean in me kinda enjoyed the thrill, till it got kinda insulting. Like 12 passing for 7. It still happens. Had an Uber driver on an empty street pass right by me in broad daylight. While on the phone…with me. “Sorry, some dumbass kid on his phone almost walked right into my car, parents should not be giving them phones that early. Anyway I don’t see you…” I was 20.
@@FoxGirl-ql2ku yeah it's easier to see who is into "underage girls" when they are hoping you are. It's not fun at all. It's only fun if it is safe enough to call them out to their face on how disgusting 🫣 they are. Bitch, I ain't a fetish or a child, and now YOU are on my watch-list. That's how I view those types of encounters with those types of usually men. And then when I say I am 30, and they are still excited and start saying how youthful I look to make up for them slipping up and trying to be like 👍 👌 🙃 😅 😑 😒. I don't need that type of back handed, out of pocket and low effort "compliments" from men who want to date me for "my looks" aka, they can, and DO want to see me like a child. Gross beyond belief. Honestly being short, young looking, and navigating adult dating and the ick of hoping that the person isn't into that 😕 😐 and sees you for WHO YOU ARE, not what age they perceive you as for nothing but their own view of you. It's a creepy power dynamic. Could go on for my whole life with examples. Why is it still in 2023 being short is still not discussed the same way we normalize all body types in the positivity movement. Anyway love ya'll ❤️
I would have failed this test immediately as a kid. I knew exactly how old I was and the day and month of my birthday. If someone had asked me what year I was born at the actual age of 7, I wouldn’t of had any idea😂. I probably didn’t know the current year either or have the necessary critical thinking skills to say to myself what year it was and count backwards. Definitely would have been a deer in the headlights 😂.
@@luxurylifela2068 if I couldn’t do the math, my parents would tell me and luckily I never forgot it because we would do little practice scenes in the car on the ride there.
@@luxurylifela2068 Same lol. I knew my day and month of birth, and I knew what age I was, but I had no idea what year I was born or what the current year was.
My parents did that too at an amusement park where entry was free for children under 5... i remember screaming in front of the ticket counter- I AM NOT 5, I AM 7.... I AM 7 YEARS OLD!!! My parents were so embarrassed but I got in for free 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂
I have a cousin who got majorly pissed off when the cashier tried to give her the 12 and under rate when she was 18. Shortly after she figured out how to look older with makeup.
@@blueblossom3384those buffets are expensive, I had my kids fo that also..until they blurted out their real age and made me get charged full price. We couldn't go back until like 3 months because as a single parent I didn't have the money to then to pay full amount. Now my kids get it and say NOTHING when I'm trying to get deals. 😁🤣
Our school made us pretend we were 15 year olds cause the metro tickets in London were cheaper that way. We were there for a week and no one caught on. The teachers did tel us that if you had a ticked that didn't work give it to a person that looked younger in the group and then go to the help desk...😅 Also not only asian moms make you do this all moms honestly Love the video❤
@@SakinaChoonawala Kumon is a teaching institute for any age if you need help with Maths or Eng . Other country's also do other subjects. I hope this helps ❤
Sent my kids to Kumon too and as a Black mom - we do this too. The grit teeth and smile talk - "you are 11 just for now" smile. They always want to be honest right then - Mom, I am 18🤣