A tall platform at the Colorado Springs Zoo gives patrons a once-in-a-lifetime, eyeball-to-eyeball experience with giraffes, the gentle giants of the animal kingdom. Not quite two years old, my little grandson fed lettuce leaves to his new, tame, and very attentive friends.
“Look at those big brown eyes!” I crowed. “Big, beautiful eyes like yours!”
“Long purple tongue!” he roared back with a husky laugh, absolutely delighted with the monstrous deep violet mouthful of muscle the giraffe was using to seize the lettuce leaves from his extended hand.
Adjusting My Lens
Once I had adjusted my own lens to his perspective, his response made perfect sense to me. Having raised four little boys, I’m sure I’ve heard every bathroom joke, dodged ten thousand Nerf bullets, removed countless dead worms from little jeans’ pockets, and spent hours of my life hushing potty talk and teaching good manners at the dining room table.
Those adorable little bundles wrapped in blue who come home from the hospital smelling like baby shampoo don’t take long to become obsessed with gross humor, bodily functions, and things that make most adult females cringe. It seems that part of the boy-mom job description is coming to terms with the ‘Yuck Factor’ and steering our little darlings toward commonly held standards of civility.
How do we do this? We accomplish this by cultivating an appreciation for good manners and by making them aware that their potty mouth is offensive to us and to others. We remind them consistently that their bodily functions are simply not as fascinating to everyone else on the planet. And we do it every single day.
It Takes a Village
Our potato soup was hot and creamy, and the cheese I had sprinkled on top of mine melted and stretched in a web between my bowl and spoon. My friend Karen and I were unphased by long pauses or even interruptions to our conversation, because we were chewing on more than just our thick slices of French bread. We were two boy moms ruminating on the “Why?” behind boy energy and boy behavior.
How is it possible that we love them like crazy, even on the days when it seems as if they woke up in the morning with the goal of destroying our house?
“I don’t know what I’d do without my husband’s input,” Karen sighed. “He sets the tone and is determined not to let things slide.”
I agreed, remembering my husband’s firm, “We don’t talk that way in our house.”
There’s no substitute for a wholehearted co-parent in this business of civilizing the little barbarians God has entrusted to our care. However, single mothers can find solidarity with their fellow boy-moms who are also willing to set and then enforce rules of conduct, polite behavior patterns, and good manners so that the same expectations apply across the board no matter who’s hosting
It seems that part of a mom’s job description is coming to terms with the ‘Yuck Factor’ and steering our little darlings toward commonly held standards of civility.
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Setting the Standard for Good Behavior
There’s no question that some behaviors and speech should be off limits. It’s up to you to draw that line for your own family:
Are the rules stricter at the dinner table?
Is it ever acceptable to share bathroom humor or to laugh at the way gas escapes from either end of someone’s body?
What exactly crosses the line between funny and disgusting?
Whatever rules or standards seem good to you, make sure you and your husband are on the same page. Then, be consistent and find a way to enforce penalties for infractions.
Whether it’s paying a fine, losing a privilege, sitting in time-out, or creating a written apology, try to make the punishment fit the crime. And be sure to pick your battles carefully so that enforcement is worth the effort!
Let common courtesy and mutual respect be the rule of law. The Golden Rule prescribes a way of eating at the table, sitting in the family room, or even riding in the minivan: “Whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them” (Matthew 7:12).
It’s pretty simple. “If you don’t like the way those mashed potatoes look in your brother’s open mouth, chew with your mouth closed. If you don’t want someone punching you on the arm or jumping on your back when you’re not expecting it, stay in your own space, too!”
Let courtesy and mutual respect be your family’s rule of law. The Golden Rule prescribes a way of eating at the table, sitting in the family room, or even riding in the minivan: Whatever you wish others would do to you do also to them.
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Positive Practice for Good Manners
It’s rough when baseball games keep the family on the bleachers until dark, but family meals around the table are indispensable for modeling and teaching good manners.
It takes a bit of effort to set the table, but kids will only learn to use their utensils properly and skillfully if they are given the opportunity to practice in a safe zone. Movie nights with pizza in the family room are a special memory for my family, but the routine of gathering around the table and learning to pass the peas, put the napkin in your lap, and sit respectfully until everyone else has finished was our daily classroom for Civilization 101.
My friend Karen has identified Valentine’s Day as the perfect opportunity for teaching good manners in a fun context. Everyone dresses up as if they were going to a fancy restaurant, but then enjoys a special meal at home. Dad, the suave ‘maître d’, throws a dish towel over his arm and serves sparkling cider as the family dines together in peaceful elegance, putting into practice the good manners they’ve (hopefully) absorbed at the family dinner table.
Even our sons’ reading material can have a huge influence on their language and their concept of what constitutes ‘appropriate’ behavior.
Offset a culture of Captain Underpants and Dog Man with books that feature family togetherness, strong female protagonists, respectful behavior toward adults, and a healthy work ethic. Expose them to a kinder, gentler world through their imagination and offer the incentive of a half hour later bedtime if the half hour is spent reading a book you have recommended.
Making Good Manners a Lot of Fun
I was thrilled when my oldest granddaughter was old enough to come to Bam’s house for a tea party! I dusted off my Auntie Dawn’s pink rosebud tea set, and we sat outside at the picnic table listening to the birds and engaging in quiet conversation. Apparently, her big brother heard rave reviews of the experience when she went home, because the next time I saw him, the first words out of his mouth were, “Bam, when are ‘we’ going to have a tea party?”
Needless to say, tea parties are now a co-ed experience at my house, and I lament having missed the opportunity to sip tea from delicate porcelain cups and eat dainty sweets with my sons. My grandkids and I sip instead of slurp, practice conversational skills, and politely pass the plate of goodies to others first. Everyone gets a turn to pour the tea from the lovely rosebud teapot, because I cool the tea with milk and use only very well-worn and washable tablecloths on tea party day.
Pass-the-Pitcher Relay
Passing a pitcher with the handle turned toward the recipient is also a fun relay game to play when friends come to visit. Simply form two lines and hand a full (unbreakable) pitcher to the first person in each line. At the signal, players turn the pitcher’s handle toward the next person in line and pass it on without spilling. The winning team is the fastest AND the most careful, judged by the water level still in the pitcher at the end.
When all has been said and done, when the giraffe’s tongue really is big and purple, when the third glass of spilled milk is being mopped up from the table, when the horrible third-grade-level bathroom joke really is (a little bit) funny, and the flames from the paper napkin that somehow made contact with the Advent candle have been doused, we have to just chill out and have a good laugh with our kids.
Provided that we don’t take ourselves too seriously and lose sight of the end game (which is always the glory of God, right?), memories of your kids’ dining room faux pas and your efforts to civilize and teach good manners to your children will become better and more precious every year.
Holding You in the Light,

Kids’ media influences their concept of “appropriate” behavior. Offset a culture of Captain Underpants with books that feature family togetherness, strong female protagonists, respectful behavior toward adults, and a healthy work ethic
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Oh you just KNOW I can relate to all of this! I felt myself rolling my eyes so often at all those boy antics. Luckily mine were pretty tame compared to other stories I’ve heard!
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Boy Mum solidarity!!
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This is profound and fundamental to the keeping of all things civil about civilization. It breaks my heart to admit that whereas this was once the norm of raising good responsible people it is a dying art. In my lifetime I have witnessed the decline of the skills and roles of good parenting. Modernity is destroying us, I fear. The concept of family is morphing into something that is meaningless. So many heartbreaking stories. The hope I cling to is that God always keeps a remnant. You and yours are clearly in that number.
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I pray to that end all the time.
And I value your encouragement and insight!
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“Let common courtesy and mutual respect be the rule of law.” Michele, this is true of boys and girls. And … it is true of us adults. It seems like common courtesies are often forgotten. May we not only teach our littles common courtesy, may we be models they can see in action as well.
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You are so right! We trust for grace to be what we should be and want to be!
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I love that story! I can just hear the delightful dialogue! We are in a month filled with family events, quite the unusual occurance since we’re spread out all over from Virginia to Massachusetts. These are the good old days and I’m savoring every moment we have together … and then collapsing in a heap on those spare days that are quiet and free.
So grateful for this family season that will soon be gone, yet again. Some day we’ll all be together forever.
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Oh, enjoy every exhausting, overwhelming minute as your heart bursts with happiness!
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Michelle,
Thanks so much for stopping by! As a Mom of 2 sons, this post really resonated with me…and I think it is very relative in today’s society because of the example being set by political leaders who love to call their opponents names and act like bullies…Everything you want to teach your children and grandchildren NOT to do!! So I wholeheartedly think the phase ” We don’t talk like that in our house” can not only apply to children but to some adults!! Thanks for sharing!!
Hugs,
Deb
Debbie-Dabble Blog
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Oh, what a great point!
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Thank you for this. I sent it to my three granddaughters who all have sons.
Sent from my iPhone
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Thank you for reading and for the gift of spreading the word!
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Michele, how I appreciate your messages. Not every time ( my loss:), but each time I do read these wonderful words, I
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I’m always so happy to hear from you!
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I love this, Michele. Some battles are worth picking and some are not. Over the years, I know I have picked some that weren’t worth it. Prayers for wisdom and a good sense of humor are vital parenting tools, aren’t they?
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Yes, most of my parenting regrets fall under the category of misplaced battles…
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MIchele, I thoroughly enjoyed your post! I found myself laughing because I’m a boy mom, even though the 3 boys came after 4 daughters. Seriously, though, you have very good advice. We want to glorify God, but that doesn’t rule out some humor. We need to relax and do the best we can relying on God to guide. By the way, my boys loved tea time. We were already reading every day while we had tea, so when the boys came along, they thought it was the normal thing to do! Blessings to you! xo
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Tea time is such a great tradition—and so civilized!
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