Technology3 mins ago
No Thankyou?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hello Vinny & Andy.
Our daughters are 5 and 2 years old and we have taught them to say please and thank you, as well as pardon me, excuse me please etc., and our eldest will open doors for people. If she is thanked, she often says 'You're welcome'.
It doesn't cost a thing to say thank you and be polite, but unfortunately, it does seem to be 'going out of fashion' - but not in our family.
It's horrible because we all sound so 'old', but I agree that it seems some people don't teach their children to be polite any more.
People have always told me how proud I should be of my children because they've always been polite. Of course, they don't learn it all by themselves and my own children have told me that lots of times they feel like 'an old granny' when they find themselves automatically correcting their friends for not using their Ps and Qs, etc.
My kids aren't perfect, not by a long chalk - but then again, no one is - so I'm not bragging about them, but I always did as Andy Hughes and Vinny200 did: if they didn't ask properly they didn't get it; if they didn't say thank you, it was taken away from them. It's harder at the time, but it's worth it later on.
Now my children are 17 and 14 and I guess the worst is yet to come ...
Watch this space!
you know whos manners I find the worst? middle-aged women (sorry if theres any out there, i'm sure you're all lovely hehe) i always hold doors open for people, and they usually happen to be middle-aged women, and nobody ever says thank you. I always say thank you, to everyone, whether they're old, young, man or woman. people obviously think I don't deserve to be thanked, just because most of todays youth have no manners, doesn't excuse rudeness to those of us who do.
sorry for the rant, it just annoys me.
If she didn't get a single thank-you either verbally or written then she has unusually impolite friends/relatives or they don't like her at all and she is trying to buy their affection.
I hope that is more likely that she is refering to not recieving written thank you notes for the gifts. These are certainly less common nowdays as people are more likely to pick up the phone and thank them. I don't think that this makes them any less sincere in their appreciation of the gift, from my point of view I give gifts so that people I care about will enjoy what I have given, not so that I receive gratitude from them.
So if she is withholding the gifts due to the first reason (absolutely not thanks) then that is fair enough, however if she is doing so because she got a phone call rather than a card then I think she is being unreasonable.