Uh, no. I said no one had commented (on her post) that he seemed a little rude or demanding. Which is very different than me calling him rude. I did not comment on her post.
Between me and my kids, I would have asked for better manners. I was simply looking for input and discussion on whether people think brevity>polite when texting, particularly between parent/child.
So, a friend of mine posted a text convo she had with her 12 year old on fb because she thought it was cute and funny. Part of the convo in the screenshot was her 12 year old son texting to her
“Come get me now, pull to the back and let me know when you get here”
Do people feel like texting is just casual, doesn’t need to include all the niceties and this is perfectly ok? Or should all communication be polite? Do you expect your kids to be polite to you?
I’ve taught my kids to be polite and respectful in all forms of communication. But maybe it’s just me, as my friend posted this without a second thought and no one has commented that he was a little rude or demanding. (My answer to the above text would have been “Try again and use some manners this time”)
Is this going to be one of those posts where you ask if people agree with you and then you get irritated when they don’t?
Like I said in my OP. I can't judge whether or not it's rude when it's taken out of context. If I told my child to let me know when they needed to get picked up and they texted that I wouldn't find it rude. If I had no idea that they needed a ride and they texted that out of nowhere then yes I would expect a more polite text.
Yet she has no idea of what transpired before or after the text. Pretty strong commentary on how rude she thought the text when she stated that if her own children had sent that text, she would have told them to send a more polite one.The OP never stated she expected please and thank you. Just that she was surprised by the tone of that text.
To me, there is night/day difference between "come get me now" and "I'm ready" or something like that.
People who are constancy on a quest to be offended will see the "rude" in the text, other than that text seemed srtrait to the point and I'd have .......zero problem dropping whatever important task I was currently engaged in to pick up little Johnny. I made up the part after..... cause the drama meter when's off the charts when I read that part LOL.
I see the " now" as less a command and more as if there were a conversation prior about when to pick up, the time was not known, so letting the person know they can come "now"Believing a behavior is rude is not the same as indicting someone's entire character as rude.
This is a discussion about a specific behavior, texting using commands. I'm sort of flummoxed by how personally people are taking this. I'm definitely "siding" with the OP in this "fight," but not understanding why people feel it needs to be a fight. For me, it was the "now" in the original quote that made it seem rude.
I disagree that this is the difference between formal and informal communication.
I text with my young adult sons all the time, also with my siblings and close friends. It is informal and concise, but seldom involves commands. For example, If i want someone to call me or they want me to call we say "can you talk?" or "can I call?" "need to talk. Call?" or even the more gentle "command"of "Call when you can." I can't see us saying "call me now" unless we are responding to a specific question that requires that as an answer or there was some sort of emergency where I was showing urgency.
Having the opinion that talking, even by text, in commands is rude, doesn't mean I'm formal or that I'm characterizing all people who do this as rude overall. I think the specific behavior comes off as rude.
Instead of having this conversation, we seem to be having an "are you calling me fat?" disagreement. LOL!
Exactly. I didn’t read “now” as a command but more as a point in time. Like, “I’m finished eating now”.Is it the "now" that's the problem?
Would "Done" have been less rude? Or "Come get me at 7:30"?