GAGirlInVA
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2010
- Messages
- 1,255
I hate it too! Only DH can call me Hon.
in your opinion its not ok....
Like others have stated, its the culture where that is part of normal everyday living.
Are you saying that their culture is wrong?
I'm Southern, so apparently it's a part of my culture and I don't like it at all. To me terms of endearment are better left to those close to us. Using them for people you don't know well is overly familiar and I find it annoying. Fortunately I'm not alone - I actually don't know anyone who would call random people "Hun". Oddly I've mainly just encountered waitresses and little old ladies who actually do it (well, and some sarcastic younger women who are being syrupy sweet to someone they dislike), though I keep reading on message boards that all Southerners do it constantly. I have never said anything to correct anyone who calls me any of those terms, but I hate it and I'd never refer to anyone else by them unless I was close to them. I dislike it but I don't really consider it completely rude unless you are talking to someone significantly older than you. In the one case in this thread where the customer fussed at the girl, the girl was wrong even in the South. You don't ever refer a woman older than you (who you don't know) by a term of endearment if you're concerned with being polite - you call her ma'am or Mrs (or Miss) Lastname until she tells you to do otherwise.
Then don't respond. "Honey, can you go get this?" Silence and ignoring on your end. Repeated. Continued silence. Eventually you can respond, "Oh, were you talking to me? My name is Susan."I am not sure why it irks me so much but it does. One of my husbands friends always says thanks hun, or honey can you go get this. Ugh. He says it in a demeaning tone, which I think is the problem. I am not the maid and I don;t answer to hon.
Add me to the group that finds it offensive. I do not like it at all! And I do think it sounds condescending like you are a child or something. I am not a child I am a grown adult. I really hate it in a profeesional setting. I think it is completely unprofessional, although I do hear it at work. If my employee was calling the customers honey or the like I would be having a talk with them. Some things are ok in family and casual settings but not in public and not with people you do not know. And definately not in a place of business.
...The biggest reason I find it offensive is that most frequently, it's only referring to women. You don't often hear men called "honey" or "hun" or "darlin" (I always think of JR Ewing when I hear that one!) in the workplace. But you do hear men call women those terms...
I live in the South and I almost never hear this. I say almost never because we were in a restaurant a few months ago and the waitress called me 'hun'. I was taken aback and thought it was very weird. She was around 20 years old. I didn't like it but I didn't make a big deal about it either. It was in a rural area, so maybe that's the difference?
Not true at all. I have been called all of those things, and more, growing up in the South.
You can call me hon, sweetheart, or darlin', as long as you're simply using it as a way to express friendliness.
Do NOT, on the other hand, wink at me, wiggle your eyebrows, do the shooter guns, look at my ****s instead of my eyes, check out my hind-end as I turn to grab my purse, or otherwise make yourself out to be an ***.
I also use the terms honey, hon, sweetheart, sweetie, darlin', etc. in order to be friendly. I'm not flirting with you, meaning to demean, or otherwise reducing you to the mental age of a child. I'm being nice. If you come back at me and question my motives or chastise me for using such language, I think you're showing more about your manners than you are about me as a person. Should you come at me like someone in this thread mentioned and call me a "fool" for using the terms mentioned above, I may tilt towards calling you something other than a name meant to endear. Although I probably won't say it outloud since I am a lady...but I'll certainly be thinking it as I walk away.![]()
I agree that the manner it was addressed by the woman was totally wrong, but what if someone politely told you that they preferred not to addresses as "honey, hon, sweetheart, etc.". Would you still think that they were acting inappropriately?
I agree that the manner it was addressed by the woman was totally wrong, but what if someone politely told you that they preferred not to addresses as "honey, hon, sweetheart, etc.". Would you still think that they were acting inappropriately?
I agree that the manner it was addressed by the woman was totally wrong, but what if someone politely told you that they preferred not to addresses as "honey, hon, sweetheart, etc.". Would you still think that they were acting inappropriately?
No, of course not. The issue with the woman in that story was the way she ripped into the poor sales clerk, instead of just asking her not to speak in that manner.
No that's not inappropriate at all. I would probably apologize and ask what they would like to be called.
Of course not! But to myself, I'd probably wonder what put the huge chip on their shoulder.
Though like I said above, do not question my motives for using these terms and as someone else mentioned in this thread, do not chastise me or call me a "fool" for being friendly. Those actions really speak more to you than they do to me.
Just because someone doesn't like being called those names by a total stranger doesn't mean they "have a chip on their shoulder." It just means they don't like being called those names by a total stranger. Why is that so difficult to understand?
We all have things we like or don't like. I'm sure there are things you don't like that wouldn't bother me in the slightest, but I wouldn't say you "have a chip on your shoulder" because of it.
...Honestly, the "chip on their shoulder" comment is exactly why I have never asked anyone not to use "Hon" or "Dear" or any other endearment to refer to me. I've seen this come up on other boards and I'm always shocked by the reactions from the people who use (or at least don't mind) those terms when they discover some people don't feel it's appropriate to use them for strangers. People get very irritated or defensive when they find out some people don't like it. They never think they might be wrong for using the terms. Instead they think the people who don't want to be referred to that way have a problem...
I really think that it comes down to the way that it is communicated. I stopped using the terms because women in the Northeast are offended by them. I don't use them at all anymore. But, when I first moved up here, I got some very nasty remarks from people when I used them. Those people did have a problem. Not because they didn't want to be referred to in such a manner, but because they were jerks. Run into enough of these jerks and you can't help but to begin to paint with too broad a brush, kwim?