Anonymous wrote:You don't need to be eating and drinking continually, but when you are a guest in someone's home, you should be a good guest and accepting a glass of water if the host seems uncomfortable when you decline!
Jeez, people. Learn a few social skills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is because everyone else's kitchen is a germ farm, right?
Just accept the cup of tea, for God's sake, and take a couple sips. It won't kill you to be kind.
No, it's because I don't feel the need to have a snack at every juncture. Her kitchen is very clean, but I just don't need to be eating or drinking at all times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from the midwest. I was raised to offer food/drink to guests and even if they declined, we were to provide a beverage. My parents are children of the Depression. They and their families remember difficult times when people didn't always have enough to eat. There was a real reluctance to acknowledge you didn't have enough food. To spare your guest embarassent, you were to offer food and whether it was accepted or not, you were to provide your guest with something. Guests were free to partake or not. If the ate/drank all the food, you always refilled the plate/glass until your guest didn't finish what he had.
I think this is a common tradition in cultures that remember hunger/need/want. I didn't experience times of hunger but I do remember people not having enough money because of unemployment. It's why I was taught not to open presents at birthday parties because you wouldn't want to embarrass a guest who provided a more modest gift or didn't bring one at all. My parents and grandparents insisted birthday parties were for fun and socializing, not presents. No one was to be embarrassed because they didn't have enough money for a present or to feel pressured to spend money they couldn't spare.
I'm teaching my kids these same lessons because they're good life lessons. Not everyone, even in this affluent area, has enough.
+ 1.
Anonymous wrote:This is because everyone else's kitchen is a germ farm, right?
Just accept the cup of tea, for God's sake, and take a couple sips. It won't kill you to be kind.
Anonymous wrote:I'm from the midwest. I was raised to offer food/drink to guests and even if they declined, we were to provide a beverage. My parents are children of the Depression. They and their families remember difficult times when people didn't always have enough to eat. There was a real reluctance to acknowledge you didn't have enough food. To spare your guest embarassent, you were to offer food and whether it was accepted or not, you were to provide your guest with something. Guests were free to partake or not. If the ate/drank all the food, you always refilled the plate/glass until your guest didn't finish what he had.
I think this is a common tradition in cultures that remember hunger/need/want. I didn't experience times of hunger but I do remember people not having enough money because of unemployment. It's why I was taught not to open presents at birthday parties because you wouldn't want to embarrass a guest who provided a more modest gift or didn't bring one at all. My parents and grandparents insisted birthday parties were for fun and socializing, not presents. No one was to be embarrassed because they didn't have enough money for a present or to feel pressured to spend money they couldn't spare.
I'm teaching my kids these same lessons because they're good life lessons. Not everyone, even in this affluent area, has enough.