Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all seem unanimous so I think maybe it’s a cultural thing. Im from a different country originally where kids wouldn’t do this. DD wouldn’t either but probably because of me. To the PP who said “ who takes kids to Starbucks?” I didn’t take them, hence pre ordering on the app. We did a cold weather outside activity then I thought getting s hot chocolate close by would be nice. It’s all in the same area.
It is a UMC with parents that don’t say no thing. My kids wouldn’t do this, but their absolutely have friends that do. I have no problems telling them no.
Then you’re rude. Who only buys hot choc and refuses tea?! How strangely controlling.
It’s rude to say you don’t want hot chocolate, but buy me a latte instead, at 10, or however old these kids are. If a parent asks if you want hot chocolate, it is a yes or no question. If one of the children says no, the polite adult would then ask if there was something else they would like instead. But to presume you can get a latte instead is rude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all seem unanimous so I think maybe it’s a cultural thing. Im from a different country originally where kids wouldn’t do this. DD wouldn’t either but probably because of me. To the PP who said “ who takes kids to Starbucks?” I didn’t take them, hence pre ordering on the app. We did a cold weather outside activity then I thought getting s hot chocolate close by would be nice. It’s all in the same area.
It is a UMC with parents that don’t say no thing. My kids wouldn’t do this, but their absolutely have friends that do. I have no problems telling them no.
Then you’re rude. Who only buys hot choc and refuses tea?! How strangely controlling.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all seem unanimous so I think maybe it’s a cultural thing. Im from a different country originally where kids wouldn’t do this. DD wouldn’t either but probably because of me. To the PP who said “ who takes kids to Starbucks?” I didn’t take them, hence pre ordering on the app. We did a cold weather outside activity then I thought getting s hot chocolate close by would be nice. It’s all in the same area.
Anonymous wrote:I think having good manners like 90 percent of the time is something nearly all kids can achieve. My kid with very severe ADHD will lose their temper and act in a way that I don’t like on occasion still but by mid elementary school using polite words to ask for things, introducing yourself and making polite conversation are just habits. I don’t think consequences are necessaries helpful, we just do what another PP mentioned- if the kids say “I want milk!” You say please ask nicely, you can say may I have milk please “ and wait for them to do it. My older kid is very proud of her nice manners and gets lots of praise from adults and this is incredibly motivating to her. I hope it sticks!
Neither of my kids are push overs- we basically believe you can stand up for yourself in any situation politely. Obviously that is harder to enforce perfectly but I also don’t personally think of that as manners, I guess, more of a social skill that takes time to develop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all seem unanimous so I think maybe it’s a cultural thing. Im from a different country originally where kids wouldn’t do this. DD wouldn’t either but probably because of me. To the PP who said “ who takes kids to Starbucks?” I didn’t take them, hence pre ordering on the app. We did a cold weather outside activity then I thought getting s hot chocolate close by would be nice. It’s all in the same area.
It is a UMC with parents that don’t say no thing. My kids wouldn’t do this, but their absolutely have friends that do. I have no problems telling them no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who takes children to Starbucks?
There are non-caffeinated drinks that my son likes at coffee places. They tend to have tasty snacks and some have decent panini's and the like. I used to walk to the neighborhood with DS when he was a toddler. It was about a mile away, I could push him in the stroller. When we got there we would split a blueberry oatmeal. He would have his milk and I would have a nice coffee. Then we would walk home. I liked getting out, he enjoyed the walk, and the food options were not bad. We would go to Starbucks for a cake pop after haircuts. DS would get a kids latte, steamed milk with a pump of flavor.
OP: I suppose a lot of it depends on how the girl asked and her tone. Was she polite? Did she say please when she asked to change the drink? My issue with Starbucks drinks is that they could get to be stupid expensive and very caloric. I guess if I was taking kids someplace and stopping at a place like Starbucks, I would look at the cost of what you are willing to pay (what was the cost of the hot cocoa?) and set that as a ceiling. As for the croissant, if you said yes and she has a preference for how they are heated/toasted then who cares? I like my bagel double toasted at places like that because normally they warm them up but they are not actually toasted. the second pass through toasts the bagel.
A lot of it for me is the ton that is used and the words that are used. There is nothing wrong with asking for something different if it is done in a polite manner.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all seem unanimous so I think maybe it’s a cultural thing. Im from a different country originally where kids wouldn’t do this. DD wouldn’t either but probably because of me. To the PP who said “ who takes kids to Starbucks?” I didn’t take them, hence pre ordering on the app. We did a cold weather outside activity then I thought getting s hot chocolate close by would be nice. It’s all in the same area.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. You all seem unanimous so I think maybe it’s a cultural thing. Im from a different country originally where kids wouldn’t do this. DD wouldn’t either but probably because of me. To the PP who said “ who takes kids to Starbucks?” I didn’t take them, hence pre ordering on the app. We did a cold weather outside activity then I thought getting s hot chocolate close by would be nice. It’s all in the same area.
Anonymous wrote:Who takes children to Starbucks?