
lambskin|1449113876|3956740 said:... He sounds like a spoiled brat who waited until the last possible minute to procure the camera-3 days- and left the responsibilty for mom to get the stuff he needed. ...
kenny said:tuffyluvr|1449097553|3956603 said:... It was so generous of you to lend your equipment ...
Thanks, but the gear wasn't lent; it was given.
I very grateful for all the responses.![]()
As usual it has helped me get this off my chest, flesh out the topic and understand a bit more.
amc80|1449161363|3956933 said:Even my 3 year old knows to say thank you for everything. We started teaching him please and thank you from the time he could first talk. He may be a butthead, but damnit, he will be a polite butthead. His teacher told me she uses him as an example of good manners for the rest of the class, because none of the other kids do it. I guess it was just a priority for us.
This "kid" is an adult and he is beyond rude. The fact that it is likely generational doesn't excuse it.
I think I would play dumb and ask the mom if he got the equipment, since you haven't heard from him despite multiple requests.
See, maybe this is due to my own personal issues, but your post hits every raw nerve I have.Jambalaya|1449159272|3956916 said:I'm not in the slightest bit fooled by the excuse that it's a generational thing. Every person with English as their first language knows the meaning and the use of the phrase "thank you." Words don't change their meaning according to your age, and "thank you" is one of the most well-known English terms the world over. And everybody knows that when something is done for you, you say thank-you or its equivalent in whichever language you use. Every language has a thank-you equivalent. When you choose not to say thank-you, you are choosing to be entitled, you are choosing to be ill-mannered, you are choosing to communicate that you are above the giver. The giver is so far beneath you that they give you a gift - something free that they paid their own hard-earned money for - and you don't need to say thank-you, because you are superior to the giver. That's what these little so-and-sos are saying. I feel very strongly about this. Being polite costs nothing. I simply cannot imagine any universe in which I am given luxurious camera equipment out of the kindness of someone's heart and I don't write a fulsome thank-you letter.
Ooooh, I would give that little boy what-for, I really would. Actually, I'd ask for the stuff back. I'd say that since I haven't heard from him, I assume that the equipment didn't mean that much to him and I know someone who could use it and be very grateful. Then I'd sell it on e-bay. This boy needs to learn a hard lesson.
And he may be post-18, but he is a little boy who can't use basic English phrase like thank-you. He's at college so he's never earned money, never paid bills, never run a household or has any idea of just how much life costs, and therefore how utterly grateful he should be that the perfect camera equipment for his course - by N-ikon no less - just fell into his lap like a gift from the gods.
I also don't agree that it was a favor for his mother and she did the thanking so it's OK. She is infantilizing him by doing his thanking for him......and the camera equipment is for HIS course, not his mother's.
Shame on him and shame on the parent.
If I were you, Kenny, I'd find it very difficult to continue to be friends with this family. I can't get past such a basic and appalling lack of respect and manners. They must think very poorly of you.
Jambalaya|1449159272|3956916 said:Every language has a thank-you equivalent.
House Cat|1449165305|3956955 said:See, maybe this is due to my own personal issues, but your post hits every raw nerve I have.Jambalaya|1449159272|3956916 said:I'm not in the slightest bit fooled by the excuse that it's a generational thing. Every person with English as their first language knows the meaning and the use of the phrase "thank you." Words don't change their meaning according to your age, and "thank you" is one of the most well-known English terms the world over. And everybody knows that when something is done for you, you say thank-you or its equivalent in whichever language you use. Every language has a thank-you equivalent. When you choose not to say thank-you, you are choosing to be entitled, you are choosing to be ill-mannered, you are choosing to communicate that you are above the giver. The giver is so far beneath you that they give you a gift - something free that they paid their own hard-earned money for - and you don't need to say thank-you, because you are superior to the giver. That's what these little so-and-sos are saying. I feel very strongly about this. Being polite costs nothing. I simply cannot imagine any universe in which I am given luxurious camera equipment out of the kindness of someone's heart and I don't write a fulsome thank-you letter.
Ooooh, I would give that little boy what-for, I really would. Actually, I'd ask for the stuff back. I'd say that since I haven't heard from him, I assume that the equipment didn't mean that much to him and I know someone who could use it and be very grateful. Then I'd sell it on e-bay. This boy needs to learn a hard lesson.
And he may be post-18, but he is a little boy who can't use basic English phrase like thank-you. He's at college so he's never earned money, never paid bills, never run a household or has any idea of just how much life costs, and therefore how utterly grateful he should be that the perfect camera equipment for his course - by N-ikon no less - just fell into his lap like a gift from the gods.
I also don't agree that it was a favor for his mother and she did the thanking so it's OK. She is infantilizing him by doing his thanking for him......and the camera equipment is for HIS course, not his mother's.
Shame on him and shame on the parent.
If I were you, Kenny, I'd find it very difficult to continue to be friends with this family. I can't get past such a basic and appalling lack of respect and manners. They must think very poorly of you.
As I said, I grew up with a woman who only gave with strings attached. You sound almost exactly like her.
You would really give someone a gift and if they didn't properly thank you, you would call them up and demand the gift be returned? You would really do that? Do you realize how low you stoop when you do something like this? AND it proves that the gift was given for self-promotion, not out of the goodness of your own heart. When this is done, this isn't a gift at all, it is a DEBT! The worst part is that it is a debt that the recipient never even signed up for!
Gift giving isn't about the recipient's reaction, it is about wanting to do something nice for another person out of the kindness of your heart, PERIOD, END OF STORY. If you feel that YOU are ENTITLED to some other sort of behavior out of the recipient because you gave them a gift, it is YOU that has the issue.
Trekkie|1449166179|3956961 said:I don't really have anything of value to add, but I thought I'd point out that this:
Jambalaya|1449159272|3956916 said:Every language has a thank-you equivalent.
is not quite true
In my second language there is no word for thank you. Nor is there in any of its sister languages. The English colonised us and forced us to use a word as "thank you" that actually means something entirely different, but until then we had existed quite happily for hundreds of years without thank-yous.
Not really relevant to the discussion, but a fun little factoid to share with you all.![]()
House Cat|1449117406|3956760 said:How do you reprimand a college age child for anything, let alone not sending a thank you note? My college age kids are adults. If I didn't raise them well enough by now, then they are going to have to figure out these lessons on their own. It's called LIFE. I am not going to be their mommy, yelling at them when they are 20+ years old. I respect my children and myself too much to behave that way.
You're big on manners J. I have heard you refer to manners quite a bit on this forum. They seem to be the reason for quite a bit of your anger.Jambalaya|1449171162|3956997 said:House Cat|1449165305|3956955 said:See, maybe this is due to my own personal issues, but your post hits every raw nerve I have.Jambalaya|1449159272|3956916 said:I'm not in the slightest bit fooled by the excuse that it's a generational thing. Every person with English as their first language knows the meaning and the use of the phrase "thank you." Words don't change their meaning according to your age, and "thank you" is one of the most well-known English terms the world over. And everybody knows that when something is done for you, you say thank-you or its equivalent in whichever language you use. Every language has a thank-you equivalent. When you choose not to say thank-you, you are choosing to be entitled, you are choosing to be ill-mannered, you are choosing to communicate that you are above the giver. The giver is so far beneath you that they give you a gift - something free that they paid their own hard-earned money for - and you don't need to say thank-you, because you are superior to the giver. That's what these little so-and-sos are saying. I feel very strongly about this. Being polite costs nothing. I simply cannot imagine any universe in which I am given luxurious camera equipment out of the kindness of someone's heart and I don't write a fulsome thank-you letter.
Ooooh, I would give that little boy what-for, I really would. Actually, I'd ask for the stuff back. I'd say that since I haven't heard from him, I assume that the equipment didn't mean that much to him and I know someone who could use it and be very grateful. Then I'd sell it on e-bay. This boy needs to learn a hard lesson.
And he may be post-18, but he is a little boy who can't use basic English phrase like thank-you. He's at college so he's never earned money, never paid bills, never run a household or has any idea of just how much life costs, and therefore how utterly grateful he should be that the perfect camera equipment for his course - by N-ikon no less - just fell into his lap like a gift from the gods.
I also don't agree that it was a favor for his mother and she did the thanking so it's OK. She is infantilizing him by doing his thanking for him......and the camera equipment is for HIS course, not his mother's.
Shame on him and shame on the parent.
If I were you, Kenny, I'd find it very difficult to continue to be friends with this family. I can't get past such a basic and appalling lack of respect and manners. They must think very poorly of you.
As I said, I grew up with a woman who only gave with strings attached. You sound almost exactly like her.
You would really give someone a gift and if they didn't properly thank you, you would call them up and demand the gift be returned? You would really do that? Do you realize how low you stoop when you do something like this? AND it proves that the gift was given for self-promotion, not out of the goodness of your own heart. When this is done, this isn't a gift at all, it is a DEBT! The worst part is that it is a debt that the recipient never even signed up for!
Gift giving isn't about the recipient's reaction, it is about wanting to do something nice for another person out of the kindness of your heart, PERIOD, END OF STORY. If you feel that YOU are ENTITLED to some other sort of behavior out of the recipient because you gave them a gift, it is YOU that has the issue.
Obviously you're welcome to read anything you like into what I say. I stand by my argument that not saying thank-you for a luxurious gift like Kenny gave is the height of rudeness and this kid should learn some manners.
Laila619|1449171401|3957003 said:House Cat|1449117406|3956760 said:How do you reprimand a college age child for anything, let alone not sending a thank you note? My college age kids are adults. If I didn't raise them well enough by now, then they are going to have to figure out these lessons on their own. It's called LIFE. I am not going to be their mommy, yelling at them when they are 20+ years old. I respect my children and myself too much to behave that way.
You don't need to yell at them. I'd just tell my son it was inconsiderate to not write some sort of thank you note or e-mail.
Jambalaya said:Ooooh, I would give that little boy what-for, I really would. Actually, I'd ask for the stuff back. I'd say that since I haven't heard from him, I assume that the equipment didn't mean that much to him and I know someone who could use it and be very grateful. Then I'd sell it on e-bay. .
House Cat|1449171582|3957008 said:You're big on manners J. I have heard you refer to manners quite a bit on this forum. They seem to be the reason for quite a bit of your anger.Jambalaya|1449171162|3956997 said:House Cat|1449165305|3956955 said:See, maybe this is due to my own personal issues, but your post hits every raw nerve I have.Jambalaya|1449159272|3956916 said:I'm not in the slightest bit fooled by the excuse that it's a generational thing. Every person with English as their first language knows the meaning and the use of the phrase "thank you." Words don't change their meaning according to your age, and "thank you" is one of the most well-known English terms the world over. And everybody knows that when something is done for you, you say thank-you or its equivalent in whichever language you use. Every language has a thank-you equivalent. When you choose not to say thank-you, you are choosing to be entitled, you are choosing to be ill-mannered, you are choosing to communicate that you are above the giver. The giver is so far beneath you that they give you a gift - something free that they paid their own hard-earned money for - and you don't need to say thank-you, because you are superior to the giver. That's what these little so-and-sos are saying. I feel very strongly about this. Being polite costs nothing. I simply cannot imagine any universe in which I am given luxurious camera equipment out of the kindness of someone's heart and I don't write a fulsome thank-you letter.
Ooooh, I would give that little boy what-for, I really would. Actually, I'd ask for the stuff back. I'd say that since I haven't heard from him, I assume that the equipment didn't mean that much to him and I know someone who could use it and be very grateful. Then I'd sell it on e-bay. This boy needs to learn a hard lesson.
And he may be post-18, but he is a little boy who can't use basic English phrase like thank-you. He's at college so he's never earned money, never paid bills, never run a household or has any idea of just how much life costs, and therefore how utterly grateful he should be that the perfect camera equipment for his course - by N-ikon no less - just fell into his lap like a gift from the gods.
I also don't agree that it was a favor for his mother and she did the thanking so it's OK. She is infantilizing him by doing his thanking for him......and the camera equipment is for HIS course, not his mother's.
Shame on him and shame on the parent.
If I were you, Kenny, I'd find it very difficult to continue to be friends with this family. I can't get past such a basic and appalling lack of respect and manners. They must think very poorly of you.
As I said, I grew up with a woman who only gave with strings attached. You sound almost exactly like her.
You would really give someone a gift and if they didn't properly thank you, you would call them up and demand the gift be returned? You would really do that? Do you realize how low you stoop when you do something like this? AND it proves that the gift was given for self-promotion, not out of the goodness of your own heart. When this is done, this isn't a gift at all, it is a DEBT! The worst part is that it is a debt that the recipient never even signed up for!
Gift giving isn't about the recipient's reaction, it is about wanting to do something nice for another person out of the kindness of your heart, PERIOD, END OF STORY. If you feel that YOU are ENTITLED to some other sort of behavior out of the recipient because you gave them a gift, it is YOU that has the issue.
Obviously you're welcome to read anything you like into what I say. I stand by my argument that not saying thank-you for a luxurious gift like Kenny gave is the height of rudeness and this kid should learn some manners.
Tell me, what kind of manners are you displaying when you call someone up and demand that they return a gift?
purplesparklies|1449181599|3957093 said:Jambalaya said:Ooooh, I would give that little boy what-for, I really would. Actually, I'd ask for the stuff back. I'd say that since I haven't heard from him, I assume that the equipment didn't mean that much to him and I know someone who could use it and be very grateful. Then I'd sell it on e-bay. .
I think it is very easy to make grand statements about what you would do under someone else's circumstances. I suspect you would not actually do any of this based on some of your recent posts. If I'm not mistaken, weren't you the poster who was unable to speak up for yourself to a relative who was way out of bounds in his comments to you?
Yes, the kid should have thanked Kenny but I think it is important to keep things in perspective. Just for personal sanity. When we allow ourselves to blow minor irritations into grand personal grievances we are only doing ourselves a disservice. Life is too short to give anyone else that much power over your emotions.
I would certainly hope that you were exaggerating in saying you would not be able to be friends with an entire family over one teenager's transgression. That seems extraordinarily harsh and shortsighted. Life is better when one is able to moderate their moods and stay even-keeled in the face of challenge.
Who knows what extenuating circumstances there may be? There may be absolutely nothing personal about this oversight. Perhaps there have been unfortunate occurrences as of late. It happens. For instance, my father-in-law passed away unexpectedly mid-October. My older son had his Confirmation late October so we had a houseful of visitors from out-of-town. I had surgery early November. My husband has a medical issue that came on suddenly Monday night and required a procedure yesterday afternoon. To say that our lives have been chaotic would be a major understatement. We have been managing the basics but I'm sure we have unintentionally let some things fall through the cracks. If a perceived slight causes a friend to end a friendship then that person was not a true friend.
purplesparklies|1449181599|3957093 said:Jambalaya said:Ooooh, I would give that little boy what-for, I really would. Actually, I'd ask for the stuff back. I'd say that since I haven't heard from him, I assume that the equipment didn't mean that much to him and I know someone who could use it and be very grateful. Then I'd sell it on e-bay. .
I think it is very easy to make grand statements about what you would do under someone else's circumstances. I suspect you would not actually do any of this based on some of your recent posts. If I'm not mistaken, weren't you the poster who was unable to speak up for yourself to a relative who was way out of bounds in his comments to you?
Yes, the kid should have thanked Kenny but I think it is important to keep things in perspective. Just for personal sanity. When we allow ourselves to blow minor irritations into grand personal grievances we are only doing ourselves a disservice. Life is too short to give anyone else that much power over your emotions.
I would certainly hope that you were exaggerating in saying you would not be able to be friends with an entire family over one teenager's transgression. That seems extraordinarily harsh and shortsighted. Life is better when one is able to moderate their moods and stay even-keeled in the face of challenge.
Who knows what extenuating circumstances there may be? There may be absolutely nothing personal about this oversight. Perhaps there have been unfortunate occurrences as of late. It happens. For instance, my father-in-law passed away unexpectedly mid-October. My older son had his Confirmation late October so we had a houseful of visitors from out-of-town. I had surgery early November. My husband has a medical issue that came on suddenly Monday night and required a procedure yesterday afternoon. To say that our lives have been chaotic would be a major understatement. We have been managing the basics but I'm sure we have unintentionally let some things fall through the cracks. If a perceived slight causes a friend to end a friendship then that person was not a true friend.
monarch64|1449188479|3957139 said:kenny|1449187449|3957136 said:Thanks, Mon.![]()
You're welcome. To make up for this most ungracious behavior on the part of a boy whose got some learnin' to do, I present you a dark, hairy man and a dark chocolate, salted caramel pie for everyone to share.![]()