Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Children are not the equal of adults and they learn respect by calling non-family members by Mr., Ms, Mrs. close friends Miss/Mr first name and very close friends uncle or aunt. I have no qualms in correcting children who have called me by my first name.
Children don’t learn respect through arbitrary, authoritarian rules. They learn it through watching adults live kind and thoughtful lives.
Anonymous wrote:Whatever that adult wants to be called. Phoebe, Mrs. Princess Consuela Banana Hammock, whatever.
I hate the "Miss Phoebe" thing. We're not Southern, obviously.
Anonymous wrote:Children are not the equal of adults and they learn respect by calling non-family members by Mr., Ms, Mrs. close friends Miss/Mr first name and very close friends uncle or aunt. I have no qualms in correcting children who have called me by my first name.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is very regional. We do what people here I live now do (which is first name only) and when we lived in my home state, we did Miss first name which is what people did there.
This is so true. I grew up in the south and my grandmama would’ve whacked me with a wooden spoon if I called one of her friends Julie or Miss Julie. Mrs. Lastname was the only acceptable option. My kids were born in the Midwest, and we started with Mr. and Mrs. Lastname, but quickly modified it to Mr. and Ms. Firstname because that seemed more common. Now in San Francisco, and everyone is on a first name basis.
You don’t want your kids to be the rude kids, so I’d do at least the minimum respectable form of address. Just remember that it can be confusing for little kids if their parents insist on them addressing everyone as Mrs. Lastname and you insist on them calling you Larla because you don’t want to feel old.
Anonymous wrote:Children are not the equal of adults and they learn respect by calling non-family members by Mr., Ms, Mrs. close friends Miss/Mr first name and very close friends uncle or aunt. I have no qualms in correcting children who have called me by my first name.