Anonymous wrote:Agree with you, OP, it is rude. I even nudge my 2yo to say hi to everyone, particularly adults. (Fwiw, I am white.)
Anonymous wrote:I'm from a working-class, white, Irish American family. Honestly, if I invite a friend to come over I don't expect my kid to chat with them unless we are all having a meal or doing an activity together. If my friend and I are sitting in the backyard having iced tea, I'm fine with my kid continuing to do their own thing. I don't like hugging friends and neither does my child. I think other ways of interacting are lovely, but that's not us.
Anonymous wrote:I’m Asian American in DC and have seen this with kids and parents of all backgrounds. I think it’s the current aloof culture of social media, screens, headphones, pandemic isolation, social anxiety and general entitlement. Prepandemic I also saw it in millennial and gen z coworkers who would freak out if you approached their cubicle to ask them a question face to face. Again, not all, but many were like this. It is frigid and off putting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ETA: I don’t require my kids to hug, but I require eye contact, initiating a greeting/short convo, and politely responding to questions.
This. We don’t force hugs but you greet guests. Similarly when you are a guest you greet your adult host.
Anonymous wrote:ETA: I don’t require my kids to hug, but I require eye contact, initiating a greeting/short convo, and politely responding to questions.