Anonymous wrote:I don’t know why, but the difference is interesting to me. In some families, the parents refer to the other with the pronoun “your” when talking to their children. Like, your dad went to the store to get milk. Please pick up your clothes like your mom asked. Your dad will pick you up from school today. In other families, they drop the your. “Larla, be sure to ask Mom first.”
Which do you fall into? Or both, depending on the day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s always infuriated me / made my skin crawl when people drop the “my” when telling a story or talking about their own family. Your dad is not my dad, my dad is not your dad. Dad isn’t sufficient and sounds weird. “Dad and I went to a nats game” implies you and I share a father.
I’ve noticed it’s mostly with super cliquey awkwardly close, southern baptist type families.
lol, it's "infuriated" you??![]()
You sound WAY too intense, judgmental & sanctimonious
I'm sure you're a real blast to be around.
Anonymous wrote:It’s always infuriated me / made my skin crawl when people drop the “my” when telling a story or talking about their own family. Your dad is not my dad, my dad is not your dad. Dad isn’t sufficient and sounds weird. “Dad and I went to a nats game” implies you and I share a father.
I’ve noticed it’s mostly with super cliquey awkwardly close, southern baptist type families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your dad. Not divorced. My parents referred to the parent by first name. Go ask Debbie etc..
Referring to the other parent by their first name is strange to me. It feels unnatural and formal.
It feels strange to me when an adult says go ask dad. My husband is not my dad. I have a dad.
Yes of course. But if your mom said it, it wouldn't be strange.
Anonymous wrote:Here’s another weird one. My aunt and uncle used to call each other mother and papa speaking to each other!
Anonymous wrote:For the people who say "your dad," do your kids say "my dad" or just "Dad?"