Children’s Actions That Parents Must Correct
Children Who Only Like to Monopolize Food
If your child is a toddler who likes to keep food for themselves and doesn’t want to share with others, or if they love something and hold onto it tightly for themselves, it shows selfishness and a lack of respect for others. If parents continue to indulge and allow their children to behave this way until they grow up, it will surely make them become people who only care about themselves and don’t care about the people around them. This will make your child appear unattractive and ugly in the eyes of others. Such behavior while eating will make your child disliked, excluded, and undervalued.
Always Choosing Their Favorite Dish
Everyone has their own preferences, and some people only like to eat one dish that they love. However, the act of focusing on and eating a lot of one’s favorite dish can make others uncomfortable and may even prevent them from having the opportunity to eat that dish. If your child is using their chopsticks to flip through and choose their favorite dish, parents should teach them right away.
Children who behave this way have low EQ, and if it is not changed, it will affect their future.
Children Who Eat Ravenously
Eating ravenously shows that the food is delicious, but it can also be excessive and unpleasant to others. Therefore, when you see your child exhibiting this behavior, you should correct it immediately. This type of unrefined eating behavior is socially unacceptable and often causes children to be ridiculed and looked down upon by those around them.
In addition to these bad behaviors, there are also good behaviors at the dinner table that indicate a child’s EQ and filial piety towards their parents:
1. Remembering Parents’ Food Preferences
If children know how to remember the food preferences of their relatives, it shows that they are affectionate, considerate, and thoughtful of their family. If your child shows these traits, congratulate them; they are a well-behaved child who will grow up to be obedient, filial, and loving towards their parents and siblings.
2. Helping Parents Clean Up the Dinner Table
If your child knows how to help their parents clean up the dinner table after eating, it shows that they are well-behaved and obedient. But if your child finishes eating and gets up, leaving their parents to clean up, don’t assume it’s because they are young. Teach them right away to establish a habit. When children help their parents clean up the table, it shows that they are willing to share and have a sense of responsibility. Such children will grow up to be obedient, filial, and responsible, and they will be well-liked.