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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not like being called by forename by kids

395 replies

BreakingDad77 · 09/10/2024 14:36

I don't know but somehow it feels odd when sons friends year 6 age range calling me by my forename. I haven't said anything but part of me feels I would prefer Mr surname or "sons name - dad".

OP posts:
Fink · 09/10/2024 16:27

One of my daughter's classmates in Year 5 passed me in the street with his grandmother. He said 'Hello Sophie's Mum' and I thought, 'oh, what a polite young lad', but he got a clip round the ear from his granny for not calling me Aunty. Poor kids can't win!

Sophie is not her real name, before anyone comments about revealing info.

TimesArraChanging · 09/10/2024 16:27

Perhaps it's cultural? I had a chat with some friends who aren't British. While they were very understanding of children calling adults by their first name in the UK, it was quite weird to them personally and would certainly not be expected behaviour in their home countries.

spiderlight · 09/10/2024 16:28

My DS's best friend spent so much time here when they were at primary that he spontaneously started calling me 'Other Mum' ❤😆

cuddlebear · 09/10/2024 16:29

My DS is mid twenties and some of his friends refer to me as “Jamie’s mum” as an affectionate/jokey thing, as if they were all still at school. It makes me laugh.

Mrs Bear would be very odd. I taught teenagers who just called everyone “Miss” or “Sir”

Calliopespa · 09/10/2024 16:32

Mnetcurious · 09/10/2024 16:19

Have we regressed 40/50 years? That’s a very old fashioned view. Why would you want your children’s friends to be formal with you and not relaxed? You can be informal but still respectful.

Equally you can be formal and still feel relaxed.

It didn’t make me uncomfortable to call my friend’s parents Mr and Mrs.

MissScarletInTheBallroom · 09/10/2024 16:33

I don't want to be called Henry's mum, that would be weird, and I don't share the same surname as my kids, so if they called me Mrs Henrysdad that would also be annoying.

widelegenes · 09/10/2024 16:34

Calliopespa · 09/10/2024 16:08

To be honest this was my upbringing too. Never had a problem with it.

It seems not to be that of my DC’s friends so I go with the flow and don’t follow the way I was brought up, but, that said, I can’t see how it’s weird or disrespectful to the child. If a friend asked my Dc to call them by their surname, that’s what we’d do.

This was my upbringing, too (calling friends' parents Mr or Mrs lastname). I am 54. The generation above me rarely called the parents of their friends by their first name, so I find it strange that so many people are baffled that it's uncomfortable for some people.

I still can't get used to calling my best friend's Dad Michael. He will always be Mr. Lastname in my head. I do call him Michael because I can get over the awkwardness.

I do admit that it felt a bit strange when one of my older son's friends called me by my first name. I didn't think it was rude, it just felt strange. He's 25 now.

With DS2 it's been first name all the way.

Bloom15 · 09/10/2024 16:35

I prefer it - better than "son's name Mum"

Topseyt123 · 09/10/2024 16:35

My parents used to try and insist that we addressed other adults as Mr. or Mrs. Surname when I was growing up in the seventies and early eighties.

It was cringeworthy and quite old fashioned even back then except for addressing teachers at school etc. or in a very formal setting.

I really couldn't get too het up over this. It's your name. I would even introduce myself to young children by my first name. Why not? I am 58 now.

TimesArraChanging · 09/10/2024 16:38

Also since it's so cringe worthy now when it was perfectly fine 30-50 years ago, if the culture changes again in the next generation, what we think of as normal now would also be seen as cringe worthy by our kids. So lets not get too righteous about things either way 😀

Maria1979 · 09/10/2024 16:40

BreakingDad77 · 09/10/2024 14:36

I don't know but somehow it feels odd when sons friends year 6 age range calling me by my forename. I haven't said anything but part of me feels I would prefer Mr surname or "sons name - dad".

I think YABU because the setting is informal ; your son's friends. In a professional setting (school etc) though I would expect children to adress you as Mrs Uptight.

CurlewKate · 09/10/2024 16:43

A couple of days ago a guy fixing the road said "Hello, Patrick's mum!" He and Patrick are 23....

BreakingDad77 · 09/10/2024 16:44

Mrsgreen100 · 09/10/2024 15:09

Please don’t make it weird for your kids to have their friends over this is very odd behaviour, chill

I haven't said anything, that's partly why came here, wasn't sure if it's old fashioned stuff left over from my folks. They were older parents and I'm also an older parent.

OP posts:
SallyWD · 09/10/2024 16:47

Their parents obviously refer to you by your name so it would be very confusing to them if you said they can't use that name.

Pluvia · 09/10/2024 16:48

I think it's ruddy cheeky of a child to call me by my first name the first time we meet and I think people go a bit further in life if they follow the basic guidelines for good manners — which last time I checked involved calling your friend's parents Mr or Mrs Jones at first. If they say 'Oh, don't call me Mr/Mrs, call me Jane/ Mike' then you call them Jane or Mike. But if they don't tell your their forenames and invite you to use them, you don't and they remain Mr and Mrs Jones. This is how students at good schools and certainly in the private sector will have been brought up.

I had a client-facing role in one period of my career and I called all Mr, Mrs or Ms until such time as they suggested we make it less formal. I got a lot of positive feedback around it: people felt respected. Particularly older people, who get talked down to a lot.

TimesArraChanging · 09/10/2024 16:49

Pluvia · 09/10/2024 16:48

I think it's ruddy cheeky of a child to call me by my first name the first time we meet and I think people go a bit further in life if they follow the basic guidelines for good manners — which last time I checked involved calling your friend's parents Mr or Mrs Jones at first. If they say 'Oh, don't call me Mr/Mrs, call me Jane/ Mike' then you call them Jane or Mike. But if they don't tell your their forenames and invite you to use them, you don't and they remain Mr and Mrs Jones. This is how students at good schools and certainly in the private sector will have been brought up.

I had a client-facing role in one period of my career and I called all Mr, Mrs or Ms until such time as they suggested we make it less formal. I got a lot of positive feedback around it: people felt respected. Particularly older people, who get talked down to a lot.

Kids nowadays can't manage to relax if they have to call adults Mr/Mrs, the poor dears.

PaperGloves · 09/10/2024 16:50

BreakingDad77 · 09/10/2024 16:44

I haven't said anything, that's partly why came here, wasn't sure if it's old fashioned stuff left over from my folks. They were older parents and I'm also an older parent.

I’m an older parent, but this in no way seems normal to me.

dinosaurandlonelyghost · 09/10/2024 16:50

TimesArraChanging · 09/10/2024 16:49

Kids nowadays can't manage to relax if they have to call adults Mr/Mrs, the poor dears.

How fucking condescending.

godmum56 · 09/10/2024 16:51

my bestie's older child is now 40. they have called me by my first name ever since they could speak.

Shodan · 09/10/2024 16:52

Mnetcurious · 09/10/2024 16:19

Have we regressed 40/50 years? That’s a very old fashioned view. Why would you want your children’s friends to be formal with you and not relaxed? You can be informal but still respectful.

The idea that relaxation only happens if the first name is used is a bit odd. Children, ime, don't care that much what their friend's mum is called- they just got on and played or whatever.

Now that both dss are older, their friends are still relaxed, and either call me by my first name, or a couple still call me Mrs Surname (their choice), or just avoid calling me anything.

Boomer55 · 09/10/2024 16:52

I was born in the 50’s, and I still was ok with my kid’s friends addressing me by my Christian name.

TimesArraChanging · 09/10/2024 16:52

dinosaurandlonelyghost · 09/10/2024 16:50

How fucking condescending.

You think so? I thought that was the summary of the thread, was just trying to summarise so the pp wouldn't call them cheeky. The other observation most people have made is that it's extremely odd to expect children to use titles for adults.

dinosaurandlonelyghost · 09/10/2024 16:53

TimesArraChanging · 09/10/2024 16:49

Kids nowadays can't manage to relax if they have to call adults Mr/Mrs, the poor dears.

Like your username says, times are changes. Might be hard for a poor dear like yourself stuck in your ways, but you just need to get on with it. You’ll manage. The kids do.

Waspie · 09/10/2024 16:53

Floranan · 09/10/2024 14:53

When my eldest was in pre school his best friend called me J* mum, I said how about calling me “my name” his mum interrupted and said she wasn’t comfortable with the I could be aunt as we are good friends. I didn’t like that so the little lad looked at me for a while and said “ I’ll call you JM (m’s my surname first letter}. It’s stuck, 30 years later I’m still JM , all my children’s friends have called me it over the years, their partners and children now call me it, I personally love it, it often gets shortened to M which DH says suits me better but then he’s a James Bond fan.

I like this!

I called my friend's parents by their given names in the 80's/90's.

All the teachers were called by their given names at my son's primary school so he has always been used to calling adults by their first names. The headteacher thought it made him seem less intimidating to the young children if they knew him as "Fred" rather than "Mr Bloggs". I think he had a good point as he was universally loved by all the kids despite being 6'4", ex-army and quite stern looking.

TimesArraChanging · 09/10/2024 16:53

dinosaurandlonelyghost · 09/10/2024 16:53

Like your username says, times are changes. Might be hard for a poor dear like yourself stuck in your ways, but you just need to get on with it. You’ll manage. The kids do.

Thank you, I'll do my best :)