Anonymous wrote:Mr. and Mrs. No exceptions except for the two very best friends of my husband and me, who go by Uncle So-and-So etc even though we aren't related.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are preschoolers so we haven't had to deal with this yet, but now you've got me thinking.
I think I'd probably ask them, "what should Larlo call you?" and I'd encourage my kids to ask the same question. What does everyone think about that?
Personally, I'd be happy if other kids called me my first name. I don't want them to call me Mrs. Larlos-last-name because I never use that - I didn't change my name when I got married and I have a PhD anyway (which our kids' friends would probably never know) so if we're really being formal then my title is Dr, which I find pretentious. And Mr. Larlos-last-name won't work for my husband since the kids have my last name and not his.
I'd be okay with my kids calling them Mr or Mrs whatever, if that's what they asked to be called, but honestly I probably wouldn't be encouraging those friendships because I'd think they're a bunch of snobs. Kids calling them by their first name when they haven't been invited to do so is rude though, I agree.
And btw for the "social class", "unclutured" (sic) PP above, we've traveled extensively, lived on multiple continents, my kids have several citizenships, and we both have graduate degrees from good schools in challenging fields.
That's not the social class she's talking about. As someone who grew up in Middleburg where the highest social class meant being invited to dinner at Mrs. Mellon' s Oak Spring "home" you would not call her, not any of her guests Mrs Rachel.
This is hilarious. As someone who grew up extremely “high class” and called most adults by their first names (after they told me to), I knew Mrs. Mellon and knew her as Bunny. Calling someone by their honorific and last name isn’t classy, it’s what you do with people you don’t know very well. Mrs/Ms Firstname is either Southern or preschool teacher and not something my kids or I have ever said, with the exception of ballet and gymnastics teachers who seem to call themselves by that title.
You definitely did not know Mrs. Mellon. No chance on this earth. No children called her Bunny. Not a single one.
I did, knew her since I was born. I may have called her Mrs. Mellon when I was 4 but only remember knowing her as Bunny. Of course my grandmother was one of her closest friends so I didn’t merely “know” her. I used to play dress up from her closet when we visited. She was lovely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh I hate it when kids call me 'Ms' or 'Mrs' or whatever. One kid comes to our house, I've told her a hundred time to just call me by my first name, but she does it anyway. It is way too formal.
It's not too formal, and it's not your decision. Her parents are raising her to be respectful of adults. Too bad that you see it as your role to undermine that.
Just no. It is perfectly ok to teach your kid that the default should be to address adults as Mr and Mrs. Lastname. But if they ask for something else, you should also teach your kids that It is most polite to call people what they prefer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh I hate it when kids call me 'Ms' or 'Mrs' or whatever. One kid comes to our house, I've told her a hundred time to just call me by my first name, but she does it anyway. It is way too formal.
It's not too formal, and it's not your decision. Her parents are raising her to be respectful of adults. Too bad that you see it as your role to undermine that.
Anonymous wrote:first names. for really close friends, an uncle or aunt will be added in front.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For many of us, it's a cultural issue. I'm Korean, and we would never call a grownup (or a teacher, boss, anyone of a superior status, someone you don't know very well) by their first name. There are people whom I've known for decades, including close friends of my parents, whose first names I don't know because I call them by the honorific.
Not saying this way is better or worse, but in most Asian cultures, it would be considered extremely rude for a child to call a grownup by their first name.
I think it’s a white culture thing to call adults by their first name... I’ve had friends of all cultures and only my white friends called adults by their first name... I’ve also worked at 2 area universities 1 Historically Black College and Univeristy (HBCU) and one non HBCU... The black students at the HBCU called professsors and administrators by their title while some of the white students had to be corrected and told to do so.... at the non HBCU white students called professors by their first name while black students would address them by title....
And I believe one way is better than the other.... we are not peers so you do not address me as such!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For many of us, it's a cultural issue. I'm Korean, and we would never call a grownup (or a teacher, boss, anyone of a superior status, someone you don't know very well) by their first name. There are people whom I've known for decades, including close friends of my parents, whose first names I don't know because I call them by the honorific.
Not saying this way is better or worse, but in most Asian cultures, it would be considered extremely rude for a child to call a grownup by their first name.
I think it’s a white culture thing to call adults by their first name... I’ve had friends of all cultures and only my white friends called adults by their first name... I’ve also worked at 2 area universities 1 Historically Black College and Univeristy (HBCU) and one non HBCU... The black students at the HBCU called professsors and administrators by their title while some of the white students had to be corrected and told to do so.... at the non HBCU white students called professors by their first name while black students would address them by title....
And I believe one way is better than the other.... we are not peers so you do not address me as such!