The Mercury News Weekend

Grandson terrible at the table

- ADVICE Amy Dickinson Email Amy Dickinson at askamy@amydickins­on. com or send a letter to Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068. You can also follow her on Twitter @askingamy or Facebook.

DEAR AMY » We have recently been reunited with our son’s child after 10 years. He is 13 — and is delightful, well-behaved and intelligen­t.

However, unfortunat­ely, he has terrible table manners.

We went to a restaurant and it soon became apparent that he has never been shown how to use a knife, a napkin, etc.

I didn’t want to be critical, so I tried saying things like, “I find it easier to cut my food if I hold the knife this way,” or, “I put my napkin in my lap so I can wipe my mouth,” that sort of thing.

This was met with a blank look and the behavior resumed.

It won’t be possible to speak to his mother about it, and again, I don’t want to be critical.

How can I teach him table manners, other than modeling good behavior?

— Mannerly Grandmothe­r

DEAR MANNERLY » You have just met this boy. I infer from this that there has been substantia­l upheaval in his life — perhaps a parental split and possibly a custody shift.

If his father is on the scene, it would be most logical to speak with him about it. You might assume that he has mainly eaten directly out of fastfood bags.

I wouldn’t present this as a top-line concern, however; because the whole family is readjustin­g to your grandson’s reemergenc­e, you should step carefully and kindly into his life.

Adolescent boys are sensitive and tender creatures, with acute awareness about being judged by others, and they are surrounded by conflictin­g and confusing messages about how they should behave.

For now, don’t correct him, hint, nudge or use body language to convey your disapprova­l.

You want to be the people in his life who completely accept him, right now, just as he is. When he is feeling more comfortabl­e, he will relax and start watching how you comport yourselves, and over time you can model and offer gentle instructio­n.

A great way to introduce table manners is to involve him in cooking a meal. All teens should know how to make a stack of tasty pancakes.

Show him how to set the table. And then sit down and eat together.

DEAR AMY » Thank you for your empathetic reply to “Survivor,” the abused person who wanted to confront a childhood bully years later.

You wrote: “Vengeance doesn’t quiet rage; it stokes it.”

Put another way: Revenge is like drinking poison and hoping the other person will die.

— Beth

DEAR BETH » Yes! This profound statement rings so true.

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