Social Graces are not Old Fashioned
By: Keith
The guy behind the register is an employee. He is required to get items for you and to serve your buying needs. He’s even required, if he expects to keep his job, to put up with rudeness. It is still no excuse to be pushy, say “gimme 5 packs of smokes,” or to omit your “pleases” and “thank yous”. Being polite to service people is a hard concept to grasp for some folks. But, the bad behavior does not stop at service employees. In fact, grace towards unpaid strangers seems equally inconvenient for a lot of people. Many younger people have come to feel entitled to treat others in any way that they find personally gratifying, completely unaware that their behavior may someday get them an ass kicking.
It is, in my opinion, a symptom of narcissism that newer generations treat those around them with such little courtesy. And it isn’t just the riff raff and dregs who are doing it. So called professionals are no better. Their excuses run the gamut. They claim they’re too busy to ask nicely or they just aren’t paying attention or even this: “To get things done requires directness.” Strangely, that excuse did not exist for people in the past who perhaps led much busier and harried lives than our current generation of precious snowflakes. It also doesn’t hold true for other cultures who are no less productive, such as the British who still find it in themselves (for the most part) to be polite – and Canadians, of course the Canadians. The Japanese have one of the most complex social structures on the planet and they are still productive. No, the simple truth is that these young Americans were raised thinking they are the only ones who matter. And that’s a problem.
Kids are not Little Adults:
There is a difference between a child’s brain and that of an adult. It should stand to reason then, that because of the generally superior functioning of an adult brain, children should treat adults with some degree of respect and deference. The point being that, adults usually know things that kids do not; kids, being kids, have more to learn than they have to teach. It is for that reasons that the younger generations are traditionally told to “shut up and listen” before voicing their own opinions (which were, and still are, 9 times out of 10, nonsense).
Manners Never Hurt Anybody
Holding Doors: It’s a lost art. Kids at our community center zoom in and out of doors, flinging them open and bolting inside or out unaware of people in front of or behind them. I’ve seen young, baby carrying mothers, for instance, hurrying to stick feet in closing doors while half a dozen loitering teens stand 10 feet from the entrance deciding not to help (if the conscious thought to help or not to help even went through their heads in the first place). When your son (or daughter) is old enough and strong enough to hold a door, they should be doing it. Whether it be for an old person or a baby wearing mother, the act is one of simple courtesy and kindness. Some people may say it’s old fashioned. I disagree. I think it shows social awareness.
Excuse Me: What ever happened to the folks who say “excuse me…,” “pardon me…,” “please may I have…,” “I would like…”? These days all I hear is “Gimme” and “I want… .” Are the polite people hiding somewhere? I don’t know when people started thinking it was better policy to ask rudely for things than to be polite. It’s so rare, in fact, to see a person with good manners that when they are spotted it’s noteworthy (when’s the last time you’ve heard sir or ma’am?). More than once, my kids and I have gotten an extra scoop of ice-cream at the ice cream shop just because we’re polite. Manners are a refreshing change for employees who put up with unkempt slobs all day. My local Starbucks barista even gives me an extra shot of espresso in my cappuccino because I’m polite to her and she likes me (not that kind of like!). The sooner kids learn to be polite to strangers, the sooner they will learn to get the most out of life and the most out of other people who share common breathable air.
Have you ever seen that bumper sticker that says Practice Random Acts of Kindness? Life is, of course, more complex than a bumper sticker, but that one always gets me when I read it. To consider kindness a random act suggests that meanness is equally random. Shouldn’t kindness be a baseline behavior, not random? After all, if you’re not being kind, you must be either ambivalent or unkind. A bumper sticker that says Try Not to be Such a Dick would essentially say the same thing. When acts of kindness become random and unpredictable it means our society needs emergency lessons in social graces.
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I would also say this has spilled upward. By that I mean I find that (some) ‘older’ people are becoming just as rude, or maybe they always were and my eyes have just been opened. Something as simple as holding the elevator door open for others to get on is now too bothersome.
.-= Scott´s last blog ..Reversing The Door Locks =-.
I think social graces should be a must. I really appreciate those people who are still willing to do some random acts of kindness without expecting any in return. Politeness to anyone should be instilling to children so that if they reach the point of adulthood, they will still carry it with them.
We have been told – and I don’t mind admitting that it’s not once or twice but repeatedly – that our kids (mostly our daughter, but a couple of times for my 21 month old son too) are the most polite kids a person in the service industry (servers, cashiers, etc) has ever met. We have, from an early age, tried to not only use manners, but also treat everyone we meet with respect. (Example: the young gentleman a good 15-20 years my junior who’s stocking shelves at my local market? I call him sir, just as I would any other unknown man I meet.)
Someone has to try and make a difference and stem the tide of the crap you mentioned above.
.-= SciFi Dad´s last blog ..Mentoring =-.
I’m a big proponent for manners… although, I don’t know who would really be against them.
What really gets me is when I’m in my car and let someone across traffic or make place for them in line AND THEY DON’T ACKNOWLEDGE ME!! Or people who squeeze throught an open door and don’t even nudge the door a little bit for me.
Anyway… good post…
.-= Papa K´s last blog ..You Ain’t Rich Until You’re Boca Raton Rich =-.
It grinds my gears when people don’t observe common courtesies anymore. I make it a point to say please, thank you, have a good day and the like, especially when my son is around because I want these things to become ingrained in him too. He does surprisingly well, but for the longest time whenever you’d do something for him or gave him something he wanted he’d reply with “welcome”. I’ll admit it was a pretty funny/cute. Fortunately he now knows to say “thank you” and “please” mostly unprompted. We are still working on sorry.
.-= PJ Mullen´s last blog ..Brother and Sister =-.
When raising my oldest son by herself, my wife never really kept up with the manners part in regards to my son. When I came around I had to change that. It’s the way I was raised. He still has his moments, but he’s come a long way in being retaught how to interact with people.
My kids have caught on through our actions. I’m in the customer service field, so it’s easy for me to reciprocate to a service person.
But those punks who feel they are entitled to everything and walk thru my yard on the way home from school need to be shot with b.b’s.
This is a great article, Keith. I especially love the “snowflake” reference.