Jump to content

Unprepared at bus stop! (Lounged)


poppylucky

Recommended Posts

I regret the loss of all the lovely social courtesies and moan about it all the time, but would I want to go back to the fifties? Punishment for sexual freedom in the form of backstreet abortions or shotgum marriages, unequal pay for equal work, firmly entrenched class system with all the restricted social and educational opportunities this entailed, casual racism and sexism...mmmm. Sad as I am at the diminishment of mutual respect and consideration for fellow Londoners, I know I'd still prefer to be living now.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I hope this doesn't bring the parent fraternity down on my head, and I will state in my defense that I love kids. I am a devoted aunt and godmother, and for the majority of my career I have worked with children and teenagers. I am not a child hater..BUT please bear with me..


I think It's all down to training. You can't observe social conventions if you don't know what they are, and while I know there are plenty of conscientious parents who DO instill basic courtesy and manners in their children (my friends and siblings included), sadly there are a hell of a lot who don't.


When I was a kid my Mum would constantly coach me: "stand back out of those peoples way", "wait your turn", "say thank you", "don't push" "give that old man your seat, you are only paying half fare". I was by no means a mealy mouthed 'seen and not heard' kind of kid. I was encouraged to have my own opinions, be adventurous, accept people who were different to me etc etc, but I was also very aware of my place, as a child in the pecking order and well aware of what was acceptable. Obviously as a normal kid I didn't always observe it, but I knew what was socially acceptable behaviour. And I still do.


If I travel to another country, I always research the social conventions and what faux pas to avoid, but I think many parents today fail to make this clear to their own children in their own culture. It's no surprise that they grow up not observing the niceties that make life a bit easier for everyone.


We are now living with a couple of generations of people who have grown up thinking THEY are number one in the pecking order, deamnd respect without giving it, and who are focussed on their own needs and achievements, without an awareness that they form part of a larger community.


And just to finish, I know many lovely children, teenagers and adults who DO know how to conduct themselves, but without exception, this has been instilled in them by their parents. It doesn't necessarily come as a default feature.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks! I would love to see something built into the primary school curriculum that would cover this - although as an ex primary school teacher I know they do try on a day to day basis. I'm not talking fish knives and 'loo' vs toilet, just the everyday stuff that has been forgotten or never learned by a lot of people today.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • We were trying to contact Steve on 07990904375, following this post and yet there wasn't any reply from this number. Is it a correct number to contact Steve for decoration work?  
    • You might be 'amused' but obviously its something thats enough of a concern that there are specific rules in the entrance criteria to specifically disallow this, so not exactly comparative.  Aside from the flawed analysis, the idea of so much movement that there is a massive cost to the taxpayer of finding extra schooling is also unlikely.  As I noted upthread, the cost of private school education has increased dramatically in recent years.  Increases in fees over 10% per annum in some cases, so the idea that the application of VAT would drive the majority out just isn't the case.  There will be some who can't afford it any more. But then there are lots of people who couldn't afford it in the first place. Anyone who has accepted a school place in the last 2-3 years will have known this was Labour's policy, so their kids will be in year 9 by the time Labour gets in.  That would mean that only parents of those with children in years 10/11 likely to have been unaware when signing up.  They can obviously move their children for sixth form if needed.  The others shouldn't be surprised!  Those with children in juniors will need to take a view whether affordable or move to the state sector. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...