Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I know is I'm 43 and I get asked if I'm the nanny! People say stupid things, try not to ruminate.
Me too. I’m a POC and my child has blonde curls so I get asked this a lot !
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This just happened. My son (3y) and I are at a diner eating breakfast. The guests in front of us left and as they were leaving, struck up conversation with my son. He said he had a great-niece and said I had to ensure I do everything for her (misgendering my son). He said it a couple of times so it wasn’t an error. I didn’t correct - it happens often because he has soft features and my son didn’t hear it. If he had, I would have said something for my son’s sake.
Anyway, then he asked my son if I was his grandma and said he has to listen to Grandma and no pouting or complaining. To be clear, my son was eating his food and no tantrums at all, stayed in his seat the whole time eating his food so that was just a general comment. It’s just frustrating and happens enough that it makes me wonder if other people think it but don’t say it.
I’m 42, turning 43 this year. I get that I got an older start but it’s demoralizing to be assumed to be my son’s grandmother. I usually don’t correct the person bc that’s more embarrassing and I just want the conversation to end. Am I alone in this? Does it ever end?
In the diner regions of the US many women have children in their late teens and early 20's so it is common for women in their 40's to be grandmas.
i don't have anything to contribute except i love the term "diner region." it's so specific, yet instantly recognizable--gritty, blue collar areas of the northeast have diners.
Actually I do have a contribution. i was once carrying a sack of flour wrapped in a bag, and an elderly gentleman complimented me on my beautiful baby. i think sometimes the older people are not totally there mentally.
Every area of the northeast has diners. The college town where my kid is has multiple diners and a median HHI higher than Bethesda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This just happened. My son (3y) and I are at a diner eating breakfast. The guests in front of us left and as they were leaving, struck up conversation with my son. He said he had a great-niece and said I had to ensure I do everything for her (misgendering my son). He said it a couple of times so it wasn’t an error. I didn’t correct - it happens often because he has soft features and my son didn’t hear it. If he had, I would have said something for my son’s sake.
Anyway, then he asked my son if I was his grandma and said he has to listen to Grandma and no pouting or complaining. To be clear, my son was eating his food and no tantrums at all, stayed in his seat the whole time eating his food so that was just a general comment. It’s just frustrating and happens enough that it makes me wonder if other people think it but don’t say it.
I’m 42, turning 43 this year. I get that I got an older start but it’s demoralizing to be assumed to be my son’s grandmother. I usually don’t correct the person bc that’s more embarrassing and I just want the conversation to end. Am I alone in this? Does it ever end?
In the diner regions of the US many women have children in their late teens and early 20's so it is common for women in their 40's to be grandmas.
i don't have anything to contribute except i love the term "diner region." it's so specific, yet instantly recognizable--gritty, blue collar areas of the northeast have diners.
Actually I do have a contribution. i was once carrying a sack of flour wrapped in a bag, and an elderly gentleman complimented me on my beautiful baby. i think sometimes the older people are not totally there mentally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was at Tysons a few years back with my dad who was visiting from out of town and he forgot to bring a belt, so we were getting one at Macys. I was 36 and he was 60 at the time. The salesperson when we were checking out, who was also older! Not a younger college age or early 20s woman! asked/implied that I was his wife and I wanted to THROW UP. Luckily my dad was staring at something on his phone and not paying attention and I was so flustered I just wanted to get out of there. I’m not sure if she thought I was much older or was just assuming he was an older man with a younger woman.
That’s hilarious - my family would still be laughing about that.
Anonymous wrote:Letting random men's comments bother you at all is the only error you made. Older white men need to know to just stop talking to women. Like, just don't do it. If they do, give a non-verbal half smile, nod, and then look away.
Anonymous wrote:I was at Tysons a few years back with my dad who was visiting from out of town and he forgot to bring a belt, so we were getting one at Macys. I was 36 and he was 60 at the time. The salesperson when we were checking out, who was also older! Not a younger college age or early 20s woman! asked/implied that I was his wife and I wanted to THROW UP. Luckily my dad was staring at something on his phone and not paying attention and I was so flustered I just wanted to get out of there. I’m not sure if she thought I was much older or was just assuming he was an older man with a younger woman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, that’s annoying. But you should gently correct them. The embarrassment is then theirs, not yours. Dumb people need to be reminded to think before they speak and not assume.
This!!!!
Anonymous wrote:OP, that’s annoying. But you should gently correct them. The embarrassment is then theirs, not yours. Dumb people need to be reminded to think before they speak and not assume.