AndyRM
XOXO
- Location
- North Shields
I am a firm believer that good manners are best taught at an early age.
As am I. 10 strikes me as a pretty early age.
I am a firm believer that good manners are best taught at an early age.
Smart a**e .
Sorry but in this day and age, if the worst thing he does is eat his food with his hands I find it hard to get annoyed. Too many people get too uptight and angry and offended at just about anything. I had a son who would hardly eat at all, so I would have been grateful if he had used his fingers just as long as he ate it.
You eat fish and chips from the chip shop with your fingers, you eat chicken and chips with your fingers. In lots of countries they eat their food with fingers.
Agree with some, disagree with other points.
It's ( for me at least ) not about getting uptight, offended or angry, its about teaching a child table manners, as generally expected here.
If you take it to an extreme, do you not teach a child to talk with its mouth full ? Or belch loudly at the table, or munch with their mouth open ? They're norms (or accepted, tolerated, whatever ) but not what you'd do out in company.
Its (for me) about teaching children in a calm way, reasonably accepted norms, a decent way of behaving, particularly at the table.
Time and a place in short. McDonald's, fish and chips, agree, fingers every time ?..but at our dinner table on a Sunday, we at least try to teach standards. Problem is getting them to sink in
or dexterousAnd right-handed ones are adroit.
And right-handed ones are adroit.
rather than gauche?or dexterous
Or simply and more brutally, cack-handed.rather than gauche?