by Tara Pringle Jefferson
One of the things that attracted me to my husband was that he was unlike any other guy I’d ever known: He was a gentleman.
He would hold the door open for me. He would hold my umbrella when it rained. When we went out to dinner, he would snatch the check and wouldn’t let me see how much the total was because “women shouldn’t have to think about things like that.”
Swoon. Do you see why I married him?
Now we have a son. And if I have my way, my son will grow up and be just like his daddy. (An improved, 2.0 model but still.)
I want him to understand that girls go first when they both reach a door. I want him to send his girlfriend flowers to cheer her up. I want him to learn how to listen. I want him to be kind, caring. Bottom line, I want my daughter-in-law to squeeze me tight on their wedding day and say, “Thank you for my husband. He is the best thing that ever happened to me.”
(Yes, I realize my son is 2 and I’m already fantasizing about his wedding but Lord, help me, if my daughter-in-law doesn’t say that or something close to it, my spirit will be crushed. LOL)
Guys today (living through my girlfriends’ stories) are so laidback. Texting instead of calling, honking the horn from the curb instead of coming to the door, never ever offering to pay for dinner, etc. Just not acceptable.
How important is it for your son to be viewed as a “gentleman”? How important is it for your daughter to be able to recognize one when she sees them?
Tara Pringle Jefferson is a freelance writer and blogger living in Ohio with her husband and two children. Visit her blog, www.theyoungmommylife.com, to read more of her observations about life, motherhood and love.
Comments (20)
This is so true.
It amazes me at how often I see young men on the subway refuse to give up their seats to pregnant women or the elderly. I would've been slapped upside my head if my parents ever caught me doing that.
So many of our young men have no "home training". Sad , it's so rare for young men to be gentlemen nowadays that many women don't even realize that's what they should expect.
Sad to say but at 36 I was forced to show them how to kindly turn away from the car door and walk back inside the house when someone with less than gracious manners hits the remote to unlock the door, hops into his vehicle and reaches over to grab his cell phone. OH NO HE DIDN'T!!! lol
Admit
Also, just a note that in today's society you want to be careful whenever you bring money into the definition of what being a gentleman means. We know that more couples are in relationships where women make more than the men. Should picking up the check every time really be part of the definition of gentlemanly behavior?