MyDoorsAreOpen
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2003
- Messages
- 8,549
Is this the custom now, in the circles you run in? I'm more interested in hearing from people who come from ethnic backgrounds where this is not an old established custom.
I'm seeing it done a lot by the people around me in my generation these days. It strikes me as odd, unless the people involved are Indian. My parents always introduced me to their close friends by their first names with no title, and that's what I called them. The only people I ever called "aunt" or "uncle" were my parents' siblings and their spouses, and that seemed to be true for everyone else I knew too. I even called one of my mom's brothers and his wife by their first names without any title, because that's what they wanted.
I remember being in China around 2000, and hearing kids (none of whom had any siblings) calling their first cousins "brother" and "sister". Maybe this is something similar in the US, in response to much smaller families in my generation.
I don't think this is a decision to take too lightly. To me, having a special title like "aunt" or "uncle" implies that the person is a committed part of our lives, and that of our children's too, and like a first degree relative, will be around for the foreseeable future. These titles don't mean anything if any fickle Tom Dick or Harry I spend an evening chilling with becomes "Uncle so-and-so". I feel kind of the same way about describing people to their faces as "good family" or "best friends" -- if you use those terms lightly "in the moment" and they become common, how do you describe people who've really earned a coveted spot on your A+ list?
Any thoughts on this are welcome.
I'm seeing it done a lot by the people around me in my generation these days. It strikes me as odd, unless the people involved are Indian. My parents always introduced me to their close friends by their first names with no title, and that's what I called them. The only people I ever called "aunt" or "uncle" were my parents' siblings and their spouses, and that seemed to be true for everyone else I knew too. I even called one of my mom's brothers and his wife by their first names without any title, because that's what they wanted.
I remember being in China around 2000, and hearing kids (none of whom had any siblings) calling their first cousins "brother" and "sister". Maybe this is something similar in the US, in response to much smaller families in my generation.
I don't think this is a decision to take too lightly. To me, having a special title like "aunt" or "uncle" implies that the person is a committed part of our lives, and that of our children's too, and like a first degree relative, will be around for the foreseeable future. These titles don't mean anything if any fickle Tom Dick or Harry I spend an evening chilling with becomes "Uncle so-and-so". I feel kind of the same way about describing people to their faces as "good family" or "best friends" -- if you use those terms lightly "in the moment" and they become common, how do you describe people who've really earned a coveted spot on your A+ list?
Any thoughts on this are welcome.