Yes. And I totally get the side eye for it. Even people who complement my parenting style disapprove. I understand their logic. I’m the mommy, so I should “tell” my son what to do instead of “asking” him to please listen to me. Even when I reach over to help him, I say, “Can mommy please help?” Even as I grab his stubborn little hand when we cross the street, I say, “pleeeeease”. It is not my intention to beg my son for his cooperation; I just want to model to him the pattern of speech that I pray he adopts. I think sometimes we forget that we are raising little people and not little children. Our kids don’t stay kids long. Yes, it may be less challenging for me to yell and spank my son into submission, but that doesn’t teach him manners and sensitivity. Kids are big mimickers, so I think the best way to get them to use their manners is to model them.
Another way to help instill “please” and “thank you” in your child’s vocabulary is to smile when you say them out loud. I know I have a bad habit of just asking people to hand me things. Since having my son, I have become more aware that we Moms are the biggest tone setters in the family. If I cheerfully say “please” my baby gets the idea that please is a great word that feels good. Because he was born stubborn, he doesn’t always want to say it, but I can see that he is beginning to understand that it is expected of him. He always says “please” and “thank you” with strangers, even though at his age, he doesn’t fully understand the meanings. I don’t believe that we should force our young ones to grasp all of society’s rules by the age of 2. Most of the time, we are pushing them to be “good” kids because we want some sort of prize for our own self esteem. We push our kids to be better, different, and ahead of all the other kids developmentally, but none of that serves them. It makes us look like we are “great parents” but the child doesn’t understand any of it. Instead, I feel that we can take just a little time to focus on being their example and allowing them to learn in a safe space. I want my son to have a strong sense of self, and that includes knowing how to accept help, turn it down if he doesn’t need it, and even learning to say “thank you” because he means it instead of just being programmed to say it.

