Let's Applaud the 10-Year-Old Who Walked to School Every Day for 4 Years
A kid roaming the streets on his own is like an endangered species: once common, now rare, and worth trying to bring back.

A Michigan story getting a lot of attention for reasons you can probably figure out on your own is headlined: "10-year-old Grosse Pointe Park boy walked to school every day for 4 years."
The story adds: "He plans to keep the streak going."
It's a real headline, a real kid, and a real indication of all sorts of rather depressing things about America. But first off, let's be clear: Good for that ten-year-old! I grew up in the Midwest, and I know how ridiculously cold and snowy the winter months can be.
The six-sentence news story explains that the kid—Max McPartlin—just graduated from Maire Elementary School. Throughout his career as a walker, his parents frequently offered to give him rides, but he always refused. Some days, he walked with them, or with friends; on other days, he walked alone.
Next year, McPartlin will be attending a middle school even farther from his home. Nonetheless, he plans to keep on self-mobilizing, perhaps with the help of a bike.
The friend who forwarded me this story noted that McPartlin attended the same elementary school that she used to walk to every day, back when this wasn't front page news. She added that most of the students also came home for lunch, so they walked it twice—and the crossing guards were sixth graders. Everyone had to put on their snow clothes and boots themselves. Of course, she noted, this was also the era of climbing a two-story rope in gym.
Commenters on the piece were divided into two camps: yay kid and this is a story? For my part, I'm just thrilled that McPartlin's behavior is being treated like an achievement and not a crime.
Other families weren't so lucky. Recall the South Carolina mom who desperately wanted her kids to walk home from school, but the principal wouldn't allow it, even if the mom signed a waiver. Or the mom in Wilmette, Illinois (my hometown) who was investigated for letting her eight-year-old walk the dog. Or the famous Meitivs of Maryland, hounded by the state for allowing their kids, then six and ten, to walk home from the park unsupervised. Childhood independence has become so denormalized, so quickly, only about 10 percent of kids walk to school anymore.
So let's hear it for McPartlin. A kid roaming the streets on his own is like an endangered species: once common, now rare, and worth trying to bring back.
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I'm more amazed that he managed to stay 10 years old for 4 years.
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more impressed if the five weeks were not straightforwardly
That's a lot of fucking random strangers so I have to take my hat off to you. I bet you were exhausted with that amount of pummeling.
No. I'm not going to let my kid roam around aimlessly. Nope. A Democrat might find him, and fuck him in the ass, then hand him a pride flag and pamplet on what to eat for bottoms.
Pass.
Or cut his dick off. Democrats like to cut little boys dicks off.
Maybe your kid would like that. Don't helicopter.
He's 10 you freak.
And he walked for 365 days each year?
Up hill, both ways.
This Michigan boy walked to school for 4 years because his school is in Oregon.
There needs to be a like button for these posts.
It's less impressive when you realize that he was born on 2/29, and is actually 40 years old.
And now he's a pirate.
So,e kind of high gravity related time dilation?
I wonder how far the walk was, how far the next school is. I was walking a mile to elementary and intermediate school by grade 3, I think, and high school was half that distance if you took the shortcuts.
My elementary school was two blocks away, my junior high (back when they had them) was about seven blocks, and my high school a mile. Sometimes I had a bike, but I spent most of high school walking to school and back. Usually because there was some girl I wanted to walk home. In the wrong direction. So a mile walking her home, then two miles to my home.
My school was 6 miles, uphill both ways in the snow, and my brother and I had to share the one boot we had.
Get off my lawn! (shakes cane)
When going to the comments, I immediately CTRL-Fd for "uphill both ways."
Luxury!!
Me and my 11 brothers had to get up at 10PM, before we went to bed, and walk down and BUILD the school while our sisters whored themselves out to buy makin's for the teachers lunch!!
But you try tellin' that to these kids nowadays...phaw!
Shared leg shackles too?
I had to click on the link to the article this was copied from for someone to get paid money for an article, and it doesn't say there either, but his Middle School next year will be further, one mile. My grandkids walked home about half a mile from their elementary school.
Heh. "the shortcuts". Or, as several people living nearby referred to them: "MY FUCKING PROPERTY YOU LITTLE ASSHOLE!@!"
Throughout his career as a walker, his parents frequently offered to give him rides, but he always refused. Some days, he walked with them, or with friends; on other days, he walked alone.
Good for him, recognizing early on that his parents are total lame-os.
Maybe they were bad drivers.
or had to endure that four letter curse to keep food on the table and roof above..WORK
I walked to school from the first grade thru the seventh grade, except when I ride my bike.
About 5 blocks then, one turn.
Of course, my family was known to about half the other families along the way, and if I did something wrong, my parents knew before I got to school, because we had these things called neighborhoods, and lots of mothers were having coffee on the front porch.
What does he do with his dick? Because until I know what he does with his dick, it's hard for me to decide to be proud of him.
How transphobic of you to assume he has a dick.
Why did you assume the child's pronoun was "he"?
nunnya bidniss
perv.................
I walked to school every day for twelve years. Except when it was raining. And most of my senior year when I got a car. Okay, sometimes when it was raining too. Okay, for two year I got "bused" to a different school. Stupid 70s era busing shit. But I still had to walk to my local school to catch the bus to the distant school.
This is no big deal in 95% of the schools in this country. Only in the big city is it anything of a problem. But even there kids take the subway on their own if they're forced to attend a school outside their local district.
Glad that this kid is not being babied. But sad that this state of affairs is so rare that it becomes national news.
It’s gonna be real sad when SPB finds out there is a 10 year old on the loose.
Nearly everyone in my elementary school walked to school every day (from Kindergarten to 6th Grade), and I walk about a mile each way.
Unless a parent drove their child to school, walking was the only way students could get to elementary school in my town in the 1970s. But of course, all of the 4 small elementary schools (in our school district) were recently replaced by one new school that ALL students must be bused to (as it's two miles from the nearest town in our school district).
So they're short of Karens in Grosse Point? I find that hard to believe.
Something "could" happen to him, like a white van full of clowns exploding out of the nearby woods, and absconding with him into a life of perpetual trafficking; that possibility alone is enough to get children's services on them.
As long as he's not walking too close to the border with Detroit he should be ok.
He can identify the border by the twelve foot high fencing.
Such a horror. This is why it is the duty of every Karen to make up new rules and demand that they be enforced.
Well, I've walked roundtrip to my mailbox each day for 38 years and I never got a headline.
.......and the return trip was uphill!
Both Ways??? NO....
If the school day is over and the kid wants to go home, you fucking let him go. Stopping him from leaving is kidnapping.
-jcr
family I know, when their oldest son was ten, had a fun situation. He'd ride the bus home, but Dad was working from home much if the time, so he had to beet the bus at the bottom of the steep narrow twisty road the bus drivers refused to drive up, oh, had no turnaround for a large bus, Not thaat the wimpy drivers could figure out, anyway. SO one afternoon, bus gets to the bottom of the long windy steep road (mile plus long, but the kids have the run of it all the time anyway) kid had been informed he'd have to walk the narrow road, as both parents would be away when he got there. He gets out of his seat, walks up to the door, driver refused to open it. SHE did not see a waiting car, He said no one would be able to meet him today. She said you can't gt off the bus until someone is here to pick you up. He said that wont happen, I walk that all the time, let me out. SHE called his Dad at work on his cell phone.. he got irate.. I TOLD him there would be no one to meet him so just tell the driver to let you out. She said "oh I can't do that its too dangerous. He said there's no danger on that road, they are on it all the time. Round and round a few turns. Finally Dad says "listen carefully to me. His Mom is at a late meeting and won't be back at HER school till six PM I am sixty miles away have to complete this job TODAY and can't be to the droad till 7 PM. You have four choices and I don't care which one you take. You can bring him back to the school where he can wait for his Mom, you can wait there till I get there at seven, you can take him home to YOUR house and feed him, find a bed for him, and take him to school in the morning, or just wise up and open that door so he can get home and do his chores. You decide, I have to get back on this job so once you decide, just do it. We'll figure it out somehow.
She opened the door that day. And every day after that.
Roooolls, right?
This made headlines because his family lives on a houseboat.
Lenore, it's not ridiculously cold and snowy in the winter months in the Midwest. It's NORMALLY cold and snowy then.
In some places around here they won't let your elementary school child off the bus unless a responsible adult is visible.
The town I live in now has a compromise solution to unattended children: police will respond to calls about children walking alone but do not report their parents to authorities.
Let me guess. Yet another random bunch of anecdotes of dubious provenance.
Back in the mid-60s early 70s I lived 9/10 of a mile from my elementary school so I wasn't eligible for the bus. So I walked that distance twice daily for 8 years (Catholic school) and occasionally rode my bike which wasn't that easy with my book bag (we had homework and projects in those days).
We were a 1 car family and dad used it to leave for work before I got up each day so rides weren't an option. Oh the tough times we had back then!
Grew up in Northern New England. Walked to school spring and winter. -30 it was always a chance to explore. Took my bike in the fall and parked in the bike racks out front. Free range your kids, folks. The world is not as dangerous as the MSM would try and convince you it is and that ownership of getting themselves to school and back, running to the local store, going outside to play will serve them well when they grow up
Thank you Lenore for reminding us about freedom bring the absence of coercion. In "Invasion of the Body Snatchers," the kids were upset that the San Francisco government school district kept insisting on their taking naps. Behind the scenes, pod aliens busily absorbed the sleeping children into a Jugend bent on going out and corralling more kids into the exponentially-expanding hive of converts. Better to walk alone...
My principal said I could begin kindergarten at 4 if I could write my name and tie my shoes. The first day I had to help the teacher tie other kids shoes. That was the end of my regard for school, teachers and principals.
That kid in the picture is going to loose his markers. Where's his mom!
They must have stolen the picture from a school supplies ad.
"Let's Applaud the 10-Year-Old Who Walked to School Every Day for 4 Years"
The most amazing part of the story is how he was able to stay 10 years old for four years!