grandparents.com(sm) a new generation of grandparents.
SEARCH
Free Newsletter
Help
Loading top menu.
Celebrity • Education • Family • Finance • Health • Legal • Long-Distance • New Grandparents • You & Your Grandchildren • Columnists
Teach Table Manners

A Grandmother Tries to Teach Table Manners

Is it even possible to get two little girls to sit down and eat nicely? Yes, it is.

by Adair Lara

Columnist Adair Lara is the author of The Granny Diaries (Chronicle Books, 2007), a satiric guide to grandparenting. She is a former San Francisco Chronicle columnist, and lives in San Francisco with her husband, three blocks from the grandchildren.

So. The dinner table. Two granddaughters, 5-year-old Maggie and seven-year-old Ryan, a pair of picky eaters if ever there was one, unless you are serving Popsicles for dinner, which their mother doesn't allow.

Not the best dinner party guests, unless you like dinner guests who go berserk if they get the dinosaur plate instead of the giraffe plate, or slip under the table in a sulk if the green beans are touching the chicken.

They don't so much sit down as interact with their chairs by kneeling on them (Ryan) or pushing and pulling them up to Bobbie's chair (Maggie). I am Bobbie, I should add.

Oh, and utensils. The girls have two approaches to these — to pitch fits over them if they don't get the green plastic-handled one, and to ignore them while actually eating, as if we had laid them alongside the plate for decorative purposes, like sprigs of parsley.

Naturally, their Pepe (my husband, Bill) and I frequently make suggestions meant to help turn these distracted wigglers into something resembling civilized dining partners. And, naturally, they ignore us, as would any other dinner guests we harangued throughout the meal ("Mother, sit up straight!" "Uncle Jack, eat at least one mouthful of your nice corn!").

We needed a different approach to the issue of table manners. I remembered a game Bill and I played once, when we pretended to be Maggie and Ryan and screamed at each other ("That's my dress!" "No! It's too small for you!"). Maggie and Ryan, of course, played Bobbie and Pepe, which is how Pepe and I ended up with time-outs.

One recent evening, Bill made hamburgers and peas, with salad on the side, and the four of us sat at the kitchen table to eat. Then the game began. Each of us took a turn to demonstrate something that one should not do at the dinner table.

Bill began by jumping out of his chair, falling to his knees at my side, and screaming, "Bobbie! Bobbie! Bobbie! Bobbie, come to the playroom! There's something I have to show you!"

The kids howled. Then it was Maggie's turn. She crawled across the table to get the butter dish, and crawled back.

Ryan, giggling, ate her peas with her hands.

My turn. I took a tenth of a bite of my hamburger, declared I had eaten my dinner, and begged to be allowed to go watch a show.

Later we took turns acting out good manners.

I turned to Ryan. "Might I trouble you for the salt?" I said.

"It's no trouble at all," Ryan said, handing it to me with a fake smile.

Maggie's turn. "This pea is delicious," she said to her Pepe, making rather exaggerated eye contact. "Thank you for making it."

They used their napkins. They sat up straight. They located their forks and used them to ostentatiously spear their peas, one at a time. They conversed. ("Did you have a nice day, Pepe? Was it nice weather at work?") They took their plates to the sink — Maggie would have removed the tablecloth for us, too, had she not noticed at the last second that most of the dinner was still on it. (I caught the butter dish just before it fell.)

I'm surprised I didn't do this kind of thing when my own kids were small. That's one of the perks of being a parent once-removed — freed of the responsibility of actually raising the kids, you get your sense of humor back. And if there's one thing every kid has, it's a sense of humor.

How can your grandkids learn to do things the right way?

See articles by age: Expecting | Baby | Toddler | Preschooler | Elementary | Tween | Teen+
12 Ways to Help Children Fight Their Fears

Our expert's choices to ward off nightmares Build confidence »

3 Cool Cupcake Recipes

These unusual and delicious cupcakes are anything but typical sweets Unusually delicious sweets »

Be a Mentor to Your Grandchild

An expert discusses how you can help grandkids get into college and find jobs Tips and advice »


People Are Talking In Groups!
General Gabbery (1330 members)

It's not complicated. This Group is a place to sit and have a cup of coffee and shoot the breeze. Let's solve world problems, te...

Visit this Group »

Signup for our free newsletter Sign Up
ADVERTISEMENT
follow us on facebook follow us on twitter

happening right now

Video Contest: Enter the "Get Active with Your Grandkids" Video Contest! Ten winners will receive a Schwinn bicycle with helmet!
Recipes: 3 Recipes from Ming Tsai and a DVD Giveaway! Whip up these fresh, fast recipes from Ming Tsai and enter to win his new DVD
activities: 25 Great Sleepover Activities Make your grandkids' evening so fun they'll want to come back next week, too
Money: 5 Shopping Tricks to Save You More at the Store Learn how to tell what's a real deal, and what isn't
toys: Our Favorite Toys on the Silver Screen Some of the best films and movie characters were inspired by toys — take a look!
Benefits Club Giveaway: Win a Mystery Hat Game From Learning Resources Make Learning Magical!
article: The Benefits of Forging Family Traditions Our columnist reflects on the annual family vacation that binds the generations
Money: Trade in Your Old Electronics They may be worth more than you think
Coloring Pages: Rainy Day Let spring showers inspire the artist in your grandchild
Benefits Club Deal: Coffees of Hawaii: Save 10% & Free Shipping! Say Aloha to great coffee!

about the author

Adair Lara is the author of The Granny Diaries (Chronicle Books, 2007). An author, writing teacher, and a former San Francisco Chronicle columnist, she and her husband live in San Francisco, three blocks from the grandchildren.
ADVERTISEMENT
Copyright © 2007-11 Grandparents.com LLC, all rights reserved. Trustee Seal