Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a brooch with their initial? Or necklace with their initial. Something big enough that others would see it easily. Doesn't have to be as big as the L on Laverne's shirt! (assuming they have different initials).
How many seven year olds do you see wearing BROOCHES in 2019, Grandma?
IKR
Anonymous wrote:Our identical twins are .... very identical. DH and I can tell them apart by their walk, their stance, things people who don't know them well won't pick up on. They each have a best friend, and those girls get it right slightly over 50% of the time. Maybe 75% of the time. DH and I get it wrong probably once every 50 times. They are seven.
Family friends and extended family have no idea which girl is which, at all. DH and I noticed that over Thanksgiving, when one girl would get called the wrong name, they would just ... answer and pretend to be that twin. I am not sure how I feel about this. DH and I try to help people out. "H is wearing purple, S is wearing light blue." But they don't remember. We even tried to make things easy by bringing ALL purple shirts for H and ALL blue tops for S.
Do we tell the girls to cut it out? I think they're just tired of it. Or do we insist they be recognized for themselves?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can you insist that family and friends get the names right?
In a large family / friend situation -- I think by answering to either name they are just being polite.
+1 Your girls are being polite.
There is nothing polite about pretending to be someone else. It's polite to just say "I'm Susan".
Have you never met twins?
This are is inundated with twins--it's nothing special. Every one of my kids' teams has had one (once even two) sets of twins for the last 6 yrs. I've met tons of twins. There is nothing polite in not saying who you are if someone accidentally calls you by the wrong name. Being a twin is irrelevant--don't you correct people if they mistake you for someone else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How can you insist that family and friends get the names right?
In a large family / friend situation -- I think by answering to either name they are just being polite.
+1 Your girls are being polite.
There is nothing polite about pretending to be someone else. It's polite to just say "I'm Susan".
Have you never met twins?
Anonymous wrote:Your girls are fine. They will correct people when they want to. My boys are 4 yrs apart and have a 70 lb weight difference. They can choose if they want to correct relatives who get their names mixed up. Sometimes they do, sometimes they don't.
Don't force your dds to get different haircuts. The color shirts was enough.
And they aren't being rude! (some people here are high strung, wow)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My father was an identical twin who went by "the twins".
It was the greatest psychological barrier he had to overcome in his lifetime. It hindered his development of a separate personality. He wishes his mother had dressed him different from his twin.
Regardless of what your twins say they want, its your job to decide what's in their best interest. Differentiating in every way possible is in their best interest. Do what you can to help that happen. Different shoes embroidered names on the back of their shirts, whatever. Give them the best start you can by helping people know who is who.
Forcing either extreme isn’t the best choice. Allowing the kids to decide what they want, within reason, seems to be the best approach. Forcing haircuts and never allowing them to choose to dress alike seems as terrible as forcing them to look the same. Not sure why this is so difficult to see.
Poster you're quoting. I never said she should force them to wear different clothes or hair do's. Not sure why this is difficult to see.
I simply think it's in the children's best interest to have strangers able to differentiate between them. I've seen the serious adult damage two twins have suffered due to adults' lack of foresight on this issue. Unless you actually know identical twins who are glad people couldn't tell them apart, I think your experience is significantly less relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a brooch with their initial? Or necklace with their initial. Something big enough that others would see it easily. Doesn't have to be as big as the L on Laverne's shirt! (assuming they have different initials).
How many seven year olds do you see wearing BROOCHES in 2019, Grandma?
Anonymous wrote:What about a brooch with their initial? Or necklace with their initial. Something big enough that others would see it easily. Doesn't have to be as big as the L on Laverne's shirt! (assuming they have different initials).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My father was an identical twin who went by "the twins".
It was the greatest psychological barrier he had to overcome in his lifetime. It hindered his development of a separate personality. He wishes his mother had dressed him different from his twin.
Regardless of what your twins say they want, its your job to decide what's in their best interest. Differentiating in every way possible is in their best interest. Do what you can to help that happen. Different shoes embroidered names on the back of their shirts, whatever. Give them the best start you can by helping people know who is who.
Forcing either extreme isn’t the best choice. Allowing the kids to decide what they want, within reason, seems to be the best approach. Forcing haircuts and never allowing them to choose to dress alike seems as terrible as forcing them to look the same. Not sure why this is so difficult to see.
Anonymous wrote:My father was an identical twin who went by "the twins".
It was the greatest psychological barrier he had to overcome in his lifetime. It hindered his development of a separate personality. He wishes his mother had dressed him different from his twin.
Regardless of what your twins say they want, its your job to decide what's in their best interest. Differentiating in every way possible is in their best interest. Do what you can to help that happen. Different shoes embroidered names on the back of their shirts, whatever. Give them the best start you can by helping people know who is who.