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Baby Squared

Twins at the table

Now that everybody's digestive tracts are more or less back in functioning order, I thought I'd take a few minutes to document the unique systems of table manners that the girls have developed. I personally find many of these rather annoying and exasperating, but who am I to judge what may seem like perfectly reasonable practices to Elsa and Clio? I'm talking etiquette relativism, here. Just because I don't understand it or agree with it doesn't necessarily make it wrong. 

 

Elsa's rules of etiquette: 

 

1. Just as wine should be served in a stemmed glass, milk should be served through a nipple. Plastic or real, it doesn't matter. But under no circumstances should milk be served in a sippy cup. Water in a sippy cup is fine. Milk in a sippy cup? Gauche, gauche, gauche!

 

2. If you do not feel like eating something, you should bunch your lips up, close your eyes, and shake your head "no." But a lady always has the right to change her mind. Just because you refuse a spoonful of something in one instance doesn't mean you can't open your mouth and whine to be fed that same food six seconds later.

 

3. The graham cracker Clio is eating is better than the one you have. Take it!

 

 

 

 

Clio's rules of etiquette:

 

1. If mommy is going to eat or drink in front of you, she has to give you a bite or sip of her food or drink. You don't have to actually accept it. In fact, you can turn away when she offers it to you. The important thing is that she offers. Repeatedly. It's just a matter of respect.

 

2. Food is always better when served to you directly out of a bowl, plate, or tupperware container. It doesn't matter if you already have some of that food in front of you on your highchair tray. Point at the container it was taken from and insist that mommy let you take some directly out of the container. Again, you don't have to actually eat it. (Don't be silly!) Feel free to throw it on the floor or drop it onto your sister's highchair tray, if that's what you're into.

 

3. After taking a slug of milk or water from your sippy cup, it is traditional to fling the cup gleefully aside onto the floor. (You know how sometimes people do a champagne toast, then throw their glasses at the fireplace? Same thing, pretty much. Except be sure to cry for your cup back several seconds later.)

 

 

 

 

 

Both Elsa and Clio Agree:

 

To indicate that you are finished eating -- or if you just feel like having a little fun -- use both hands and, with a rapid wiping motion, clear all of the food off of your highchair tray onto the floor. It makes mommy say that "no" word, but seriously, what's she gonnna do about it? Stop feeding you? She is powerless. Your high chair is a throne. You are the sovereign. Show no mercy!

 

 

 


Comments

 

Tanya said:

ROFL...I remember those days. At almost 6 years old, my boys manners have improved over the years. Now we only have a problem with "he farted" and the one seated next to  said "farter" has to remove himself, with plate in hand, across the room to eat, ugh!

January 27, 2008 11:47 AM
 

Nicki said:

<i>To indicate that you are finished eating -- or if you just feel like having a little fun -- use both hands and, with a rapid wiping motion, clear all of the food off of your highchair tray onto the floor.</i>

HA!! I had forgotten about that trick. Now a sophisticated lady of 20 months, my daughter is too busy using her napkin to "clean" the table to bother with throwing food.

January 27, 2008 12:38 PM
 

EFG said:

I completely remember the no milk in a sippy cup strike that my daughter went on at 1 yr.  It drove me crazy.  

I eventually solved it by putting 1/2 milk and then 1/2 of a stonyfield farm yogurt smoothie drink in the cup.  She would drink that and over the course of a couple weeks, I decreased the ratio of smoothie:milk until eventually it was all milk.  Just a thought...

January 28, 2008 1:49 PM
 

heide said:

Ah yes, the wiping.  At my house, we call that "windshield wipers."  It is probably the one thing that makes my husband and me most insane, when our daughter just all of a sudden decides to wipe everything onto the floor, really fast so we have to watch her like a hawk and lunge to grab her wrists when she does it (which is actually probably why she does it now, she has us so well trained).  "No windshield wipers!!!" is often heard at our house during dinner.

January 29, 2008 10:02 AM
 

Sheri said:

We have 4 dogs who love my kids because to them, kids mean lots of snacks.  Our youngest finally stopped wiping food (actually throwing) off his chair about a year ago.  I don't know what I'd do without the dogs.  

January 29, 2008 11:12 AM
 

Alyson said:

Did you know that cats, like dogs, enjoy eating human food that falls to the floor?  Our cat eats like a king around here, now that Kate and Emily find sincere delight in dropping their food to the floor.  

Normally, their maturing out of a phase makes me kind of sad and weepy and nostalgic - but this is one thing I'll be very happy to see the end of!!  I feel your pain

January 29, 2008 11:12 PM

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About Roper

I'm an advertising copywriter, wannabe novelist, mother of twins, musician's wife, bleeding heart and wiseass.

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About the Blogger

Jane Roper

Jane Roper in Boston

One baby? Piece of cake. Try two. This working mother gives you the inside scoop on the ultimate in extreme parenting: twins.

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