Carolyn Hax, Washington Post, 12 April 2024:
Dear Carolyn: On a recent vacation, our family (including two teenagers) was at a restaurant for lunch. We had not had any food yet when I noticed dried food on my water glass. After the server brought our ordered drinks, I calmly noted the food on my glass and asked for a clean one. No drama, and the server was a pro — no hesitation, brought a new glass and comped us a bottle of water.
The hiccup? My teenagers were appalled and embarrassed, basically implying I’m a Karen for first failing to just live with the dirty glass and second not apologizing profusely before asking for a clean one. I tried to explain that part of being served includes clean everything, but they were unpersuaded.
Did I miss something? Is this a generational thing? Literally made no fuss at all and did not suggest anything be comped. But I’m feeling defensive. How to communicate that it’s okay to politely ask for corrections when things are amiss? — Anonymous
Dear Anonymous —
This is a generational thing and there’s nothing you as a parent can do to improve your children’s behavior now, nor was there anything you ever could have done to shape the way they act in the world, their understanding of social norms, their expectations, or how they treat other people.
Kids turn out the way they are because of the generation they were born into, which doesn’t have anything to do with the people who raised them or who created the society they live in.
Take heart: you’re one of many millions of parents of Gen Z-ers whose offspring are just really into drinking out of dirty glasses. We’ll never know why. It’s one of the great mysteries of our time, but the good news is that this isn’t your problem. There’s absolutely no way to teach this particular generation of young people how to order food at restaurants, and even if there were, it wouldn’t be on you as their parent to do it. Kids these days just love filthy dishware.