Gransnet forums

AIBU

Are table manners important anymore?

(158 Posts)
mclaysmith Wed 03-Jan-24 03:56:06

Both my husband’s parents, and mine, were very particular about table manners. “Mabel, Mabel, elbows off the table”, etc. Does anyone care anymore?
Do you bother teaching the GCs good manners when their parents aren’t there?

Sleepygran Sat 06-Jan-24 18:19:53

When my dd brought my now sil home for a meal I was shocked by his table manners and still am!
He shovels large amounts of food in,eats with his mouth open at times,piles his plate up like mount vesuvius and has poured so much gravy on it it spills over the plate!Ive given up on tablecloths when they come round.
Their children are almost as bad, but not quite.
His parents are better so don’t know how come he is sooo bad.
On one occasion my brother and his wife came round for a meal and they sat looking on in horror,and still mention it years on!

VerbenaGirl Sat 06-Jan-24 19:00:41

Manners generally have evolved, table manners included. Dining has become more relaxed, which I love. Not to say that I don’t expect GC to behave nicely at the table, but not with the same old fashioned rules that used to apply.

Dianehillbilly1957 Sat 06-Jan-24 19:45:20

All manners including table manners are very very important. My parents expected it and I did with my children. My grandchildren are quite well mannered, although struggle to sit still at the table, but children nowadays seem to be unable to sit still.

Mojack26 Sat 06-Jan-24 20:17:40

I do,ingrained I suppose..Take soup from far side of bowl,knife and fork together when you're finished,apart if you're not etc etc.

icanhandthemback Sun 07-Jan-24 01:17:46

Although I showed my children how to use a knife and fork properly, I do wonder who deemed it as the "proper" way to hold it. Whilst I understand that tearing meat can cause things to fly off the plate so can invade someone else's space, I can't help thinking that holding your knife and fork in a different hand or holding your knife as a pen really doesn't affect anybody else and to insist on someone doing so is rather controlling. The hand we use to hold our knife is based on superstition and a belief that using the left hand was sinful. Surely as a more civilised and enlightened society we should be beyond that.

moonbeames Sun 07-Jan-24 01:57:41

I totally agree. Do not like fork in left hand like a first, slurping soup, and eating with mouth open. Yuk. Turns me off a good meal. Manners cost nothing but show everything.

Goldieoldie15 Sun 07-Jan-24 02:09:37

It’s the way the cutlery is held and rested while chewing waiting for another mouthful. Cutlery are not writing instruments and therefore should not be held as such. I can’t bear looking at people holding their knives and forks as if they were holding pencils - about to draw something on their plates. Ugh!

sharon103 Sun 07-Jan-24 02:49:32

Nothing irks me more than people with their mobile phones at the dinner table.

Doodledog Sun 07-Jan-24 03:38:04

icanhandthemback

Although I showed my children how to use a knife and fork properly, I do wonder who deemed it as the "proper" way to hold it. Whilst I understand that tearing meat can cause things to fly off the plate so can invade someone else's space, I can't help thinking that holding your knife and fork in a different hand or holding your knife as a pen really doesn't affect anybody else and to insist on someone doing so is rather controlling. The hand we use to hold our knife is based on superstition and a belief that using the left hand was sinful. Surely as a more civilised and enlightened society we should be beyond that.

I agree with this. I don’t want to see food moving round people’s mouths as they eat or talk with their mouths full, but how they hold their fork is none of my business. Like you, I taught my children the correct way so they needn’t be embarrassed, but to me, life’s too short to care about how other people hold cutlery.

Cronaca Sun 07-Jan-24 07:48:04

Knife held as pencil still a no-no for me. Elbows on table when casually dining OK.

Primrose53 Sun 07-Jan-24 09:03:35

We recently visited a cafe where a family were just leaving the table. I have never seen anything like the mess they left. Two parents and 3 children aged about 4,6 and 8.

Aside from all the food they left, the floor was covered in chunks of bread, squashed chips, paper napkins. The waitress was just going to start clearing up the mess and said “we get this all the time. I blame the parents.”

Joseann Sun 07-Jan-24 09:51:36

Primrose I commented to the restaurant manager in Selfridges about the dreadful mess left by two women and their children at the table and on the floor next to us. He told me they are an all inclusive restaurant (in the people sense!) and gave me a glass of champagne (to shut me up!). grin

Doodledog Sun 07-Jan-24 10:28:25

That’s a lack of consideration for others, and a lack of basic manners, rather than a lack of knowledge of etiquette though. Those people would be rude whether or not they knew which knife to use or how to hold it.

The ‘finer points’ of what are called table manners are really just to separate the’U’ and ‘non U’, and are nothing to do with manners at all. Manners are about making people feel comfortable, not about knowing how to eat a lobster.

Gundy Sun 07-Jan-24 11:01:32

My late in-laws, of Welsh/English heritage, were especially proud of the big families they came from - especially F-i-L (one of eight brothers!) always announced to all assembled at the dinner table “anything goes, as long as you keep one foot on the floor.”

That was always a good ice-breaker for conversation. While everyone’s table manners may not have been impeccable, they were certainly passable, never rude, embarrassing or inoffensive.

The object here always was fellowship and a good time.
Cheers!
USA Gundy

Saggi Sun 07-Jan-24 17:23:41

I’ve never understood the ‘elbows on the table rule’ as long as mine keep their mouths closed when eating and use knife and fork ….im ok with that . They always ask to ‘be excused’ so the basics are there.

cc Sun 07-Jan-24 18:46:59

My daughter's children often do not eat at the dining table but at a small table in front of the TV. In general their table manners are not too bad, but I think they tend to just shovel the food in when they're watching TV.

grannypiper Sun 07-Jan-24 19:35:10

After having to suffer someone with no table manners i really think they are important. At a family meal between Christmas and New Year my Great Nephew was accompanied by his 23 year old Girlfriend who was seated opposite me. Much to my surprise and disgust she kept her phone in her hand for the entire meal, she used her fork to cut her fish in half width ways, picked up her fish up tipped her head back and dangled the fish above her mouth and proceeded to bite chunks out of it. When it came to eating chips she shoved one end in her mouth and sucked the rest in. For the mushy peas, she hunched over the plate and scooped them in to her mouth at a rate of noughts. It was like watching a starved animal eating. So yes, i do think table manners are important.

Primrose53 Sun 07-Jan-24 22:26:48

grannypiper

After having to suffer someone with no table manners i really think they are important. At a family meal between Christmas and New Year my Great Nephew was accompanied by his 23 year old Girlfriend who was seated opposite me. Much to my surprise and disgust she kept her phone in her hand for the entire meal, she used her fork to cut her fish in half width ways, picked up her fish up tipped her head back and dangled the fish above her mouth and proceeded to bite chunks out of it. When it came to eating chips she shoved one end in her mouth and sucked the rest in. For the mushy peas, she hunched over the plate and scooped them in to her mouth at a rate of noughts. It was like watching a starved animal eating. So yes, i do think table manners are important.

Seems to be the norm now. We had lunch out today and on the next table was a couple with two little boys probably 4 and 6.

They sat down and both parents got their phones out and Mother gave the boys mini I pads or some sort of gaming consoles. None of them spoke to each other and even when their food came the kids had one hand on their games and the other trying to eat.

mae13 Mon 08-Jan-24 08:00:01

Holding your knife like a pencil and "shovelling" food down as if it's race!

Doodledog Mon 08-Jan-24 12:58:44

I don't hold my knife like a pencil, but I don't understand why it is so upsetting for people to see others doing so. Someone somewhere decreed that there is a 'correct' way to hold a knife - I doubt anyone now knows who, where or why - and all these years later it is used to suggest that people holding it differently is offensive. Maybe they're just doing what the 'non-pencil' people do, which is hold it as we were taught as children, or maybe they just prefer to 'pencil' their knife? Why is it offensive?

I agree that shovelling in food, that showing what is in their mouth, that dangling food over your mouth (!!) is off-putting to others, but I'd rather someone held their knife differently from me than sit there scrutinising how far others conform to perceived 'standards' and judging them.

Something I do judge is people taking the best bits of a dish for themselves - the crispiest bit of a cheese topping, the best looking roast potatoes or whatever. If I've cooked and there were an obvious discrepancy between one bit of a dish and the rest I would always ask guests to take the best bit (and want them to do so), but when people swoop in and do it without being told I can't help noticing, whether I am a guest or the cook. To me, that says far more about someone than they way they hold a knife.

mae13 Mon 08-Jan-24 15:56:26

I read that Queen Victoria was notorious for eating at breakneck speed - so much for finesse.

Mollygo Mon 08-Jan-24 16:45:34

Doodledog

I don't hold my knife like a pencil, but I don't understand why it is so upsetting for people to see others doing so. Someone somewhere decreed that there is a 'correct' way to hold a knife - I doubt anyone now knows who, where or why - and all these years later it is used to suggest that people holding it differently is offensive. Maybe they're just doing what the 'non-pencil' people do, which is hold it as we were taught as children, or maybe they just prefer to 'pencil' their knife? Why is it offensive?
Well put, Doodledog

Offensive is a strange term to use for something which evidently makes non-pencil holders feel superior.
Talking with your mouth full, eating with your mouth open is offensive because it’s unpleasant to see, or feel the effects but criticising someone for holding a knife?

Is it because our betters were seen to hold their cutlery in a certain way and aping our betters makes people feel good about themselves?

icanhandthemback Mon 08-Jan-24 17:06:50

Mollygo Is it because our betters were seen to hold their cutlery in a certain way and aping our betters makes people feel good about themselves?

Who are these "betters" and who proclaimed them so?

Whilst holding a knife properly helps put the pressure at the right point to cut the meat cleanly, I fail to see why anybody should be offended just because they do it "properly"!

Germanshepherdsmum Mon 08-Jan-24 17:10:15

It’s as well to know how to handle your cutlery in the conventional manner if you may want a job which subjects you to the sort of ‘lunch interview’ I mentioned above.

Mollygo Mon 08-Jan-24 18:39:17

I have no idea who these betters were but obviously some still think they are better because they hold their knife in a way that they perceive as better.
I watched people whilst we were out for lunch and the pressure, however they hold the knife, is applied by the index finger. No one seemed to have a problem cutting their steak or gammon with either knife grip.

The last interview I took part in as part of an interview panel included lunch. We appointed the best person for the post regardless of how they held their knife in the dining room.😱 😱😱
Turns out we made a good appointment.