Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re making a comment about someone’s appearance that can be changed in a minute, that’s perfectly fine:
“Sally, you have broccoli teeth!”
Sally checks her teeth, gets the broccoli out. Done.
If you’re making a comment about someone’s appearance that cannot be changed in a minute, that’s rude and should not be said:
“Sally, your ears are pointy like a goblin. You have goblin ears!”
No one is getting plastic surgery with in a minute, hour or even a month. Comment was rude.
Even if they can change it, it's rude.
Anonymous wrote:It’s harmless, but also fine for mom to want her child to have better manners.
Anonymous wrote:If you’re making a comment about someone’s appearance that can be changed in a minute, that’s perfectly fine:
“Sally, you have broccoli teeth!”
Sally checks her teeth, gets the broccoli out. Done.
If you’re making a comment about someone’s appearance that cannot be changed in a minute, that’s rude and should not be said:
“Sally, your ears are pointy like a goblin. You have goblin ears!”
No one is getting plastic surgery with in a minute, hour or even a month. Comment was rude.
Anonymous wrote:Depending on context and tone, it might have been either rude or harmless ribbing. If rude, making the kid apologize is a good idea. If good fun, then a parent interfering and forcing the apology turns everything awkward.
Offensive? Is parent A afraid of offending goblins? While the definition of offensive may be very similar to rude, I think that it has developed a slightly different connotation in recent years. I wouldn’t describe this interaction as offensive. Rudeness is sufficiently bad, in and of itself, for a parent to crack down on it.